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Diagnosing Dyslexia:Its Not Just Numbers'

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ALC Fall Symposium 10/29/04. Diagnosing Dyslexia: ... Results from a deficit in the phonological component of language ... Woodcock Reading Diagnostic Battery ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Diagnosing Dyslexia:Its Not Just Numbers'


1
Diagnosing DyslexiaIts Not Just Numbers.
  • Teresa Oettinger Montani, Ed.D.
  • Fairleigh Dickinson University
  • montani_at_fdu.edu

2
Definition of Dyslexia
  • Specific Learning Disability
  • Neurobiological in nature
  • Difficulties with
  • Accurate and/or fluent word recognition
  • Poor spelling
  • Decoding abilities

3
Definition continued
  • Results from a deficit in the phonological
    component of language
  • Unexpected in relation to other abilities
  • Secondary complications may include
  • Problems in reading comprehension
  • Reduced reading experiences

4
Characteristics of Dyslexia
  • Problems in Speaking
  • Problems in Reading
  • Strengths in higher level processes

5
Guidelines for Diagnosing Dyslexia
  • IQ-Achievement Discrepancy??
  • Detailed assessment of phonological processing,
    spelling, reading
  • Assessment of areas other than reading for
    comparison of strengths weaknesses
  • Qualitative quantitative data

6
Profile of Dyslexia
  • Overall intellectual/cognitive ability at least
    average
  • Listening comprehension at least average
  • Reading comprehension lt Listening Comprehension
  • Word recognition or lt Reading Comprehension

7
Profile Cont
  • Spelling lt or to Word Recognition
  • Word attack or lt reading single words in
    isolation
  • Phonological awareness below age level

8
Ability/Achievement Discrepancy Formula
  • Use of an ability/achievement discrepancy formula
    as the sole criterion for determining an SLD
    should be discouraged
  • American Academy of School Psychology (2002)

9
What should we compare?
  • Consider the following.

10
Oral Language Ability/Achievement Discrepancy
  • Compare oral language abilities to reading,
    written language, and mathematics domains (Aaron,
    1997 Badien, 1999 Spring French, 1990)

11
Compare Listening Comprehension Reading
  • More advantageous than comparing IQ reading
    because.

12
Concept of a discrepancy between reading and
listening can be easily understood
13
This discrepancy is more related to a variety of
remedial strategies
  • Spring French, 1990

14
Readers without disabilities
  • Levels of reading and listening comprehension are
    generally similar

15
What distinguishes a READING DISABILITY from a
POOR READER..
16
LISTENING COMPREHENSION is higher than the
ability to decode words
  • Rack, Snowling, Olson, 1992

17
If students perform poorly on reading listening
comprehension, the problem is not unexplained or
unexpected
  • Carroll, 1997

18
Study of 3rd 4th graders with LD compared with
those w/o LD
  • Woodcock Reading Diagnostic Battery
  • Those with LD scored lower than grade-mates on 7
    of 10 tests that involved..

19
Phonemic AwarenessProcessing Speedand Print
20
Tests that showed a difference
  • PA Sound Blending Incomplete Words
  • PS Visual Matching
  • Print LWID, WA, RV, PC

21
Tests that showed no difference between groups
  • -Oral vocabulary
  • Listening comprehension
  • Memory for Sentences
  • (Montani, Frawley, Smith, 2000).

22
Phonological Processing
  • Phonological Awareness-
  • Ability to manipulate individual sounds within
    words

23
Phonological Memory
  • Coding of information to store in working or
    short-term memory
  • Look for deficits on weaknesses on measures of WM
    STM

24
Rapid Naming
  • Quick retrieval of information from long term
    store
  • Rapid Naming Measures on CTOPPS, WJIII, and
    several other measures

25
Interpreting Oral Language TestsWJIII
  • Story Recall - understanding a connected passage
  • Understanding Directions listening to a series
    of oral commands
  • Oral Comprehension understanding a connected
    passage
  • Picture Vocabulary identifying and naming a
    picture
  • Sound Awareness rhyming manipulating phonemes

26
Interpreting Reading TestsWJIII
  • Passage Comprehension
  • Reading Fluency
  • Reading Vocabulary
  • Letter Word ID
  • Word Attack
  • Rapid Naming (Cognitive)
  • Connected Discourse
  • Rate/Automaticity
  • Verbal Reasoning- analogies
  • Isolated Words
  • Phono/Orthographic Coding
  • Cognitive Fluency- processing speed- direct
    recall of information from acquired knowledge

27
Test of Early Reading 3 (TERA-3)READING
COMPOSITE(for ages 3-6 through 8-6)
  • 3 SUBTESTS best measure of childs overall
    reading ability.
  • BEST SINGLE PREDICTOR OF FUTURE READING ABILITY
  • GOOD INDICATOR OF SCHOOL ABILITIES THAT ARE
    INFLUENCED BY READING ABILITY

28
Children who do poorly on Reading Composite
  • May have weak word identification skills
  • May be unable to decode phonemically regular
    words or recognize words with irregular
    orthography
  • May not comprehend what they read
  • Examiner will need to go beyond interpreting the
    TERA-3 to discover the basis for poor
    performance.

29
Alphabet Subtest
  • Measures childs knowledge and use of letters
  • Those who do well probably
  • Are good at phonics
  • Have no trouble decoding words in print
  • Have a good grasp of sound associated with
    letters and letter combinations

30
Alphabet Subtest
  • Those who do poorly on this subtest
  • Probably confuse or mispronounce letters
  • May omit or add inaccurate sounds to words
  • May have difficulty learning about sound-letter
    relationships
  • Their ability to decode written words will likely
    be poor

31
Conventions Subtest
  • Those who do poorly on this test probably
  • May find print confusing
  • May overlook punctuation
  • May not be able to navigate easily through a book

32
Conventions Subtest
  • Measures the arbitrary aspects of English print
  • Those who do well on this test probably
  • Understand how to hold a book
  • Where to begin reading on a page
  • When to turn a page
  • Know that books have different parts (table of
    contents, glossary, index)
  • Understand punctuation marks

33
Meaning Subtest
  • Measures a wide variety of ways in which a child
    comprehends print.
  • Children who do well on this subtest probably
  • Recognize the meanings of signs, logos, words in
    both figural and situational contexts.
  • Understand relations among words
  • Are knowledgeable about different types of print
  • Interpret stories, predict, paraphrase

34
Meaning Subtest
  • Children who do poorly on this subtest
  • Often do not understand what they have read
  • Lose their place when reading
  • Struggle to relate to ideas.
  • Cannot accurately answer questions about what
    they have read.

35
DIBELS
  • Website http//dibels.uoregon.edu
  • DIBELS measures are FREE to download and use.
  • Kindergarten through Sixth Grade Benchmarks and
    Progress Monitoring Booklets are available

36
Gray Oral Reading Test-4
  • Graded passages
  • Measures rate, accuracy, fluency, and reading
    comprehension
  • Multiple choice format
  • Oral Reading Quotient

37
Interpreting Writing TestsWJIII
  • Writing Samples- connected discourse
  • Editing
  • Writing Fluency- rate/automaticity
  • Spelling-
  • Spelling of Sounds-

38
Analysis of Spelling Errors
  • Differentiate between phonetically inaccurate
    spelling phonetically accurate
  • Spell words with regular grapheme-phoneme
    correspondence?
  • Spell words that require memory of visual
    patterns/features

39
Specific Error Patterns
  • Addition of unnecessary letters
  • Omissions of needed letters
  • Mispronunciations of dialectal speech patterns
  • Reversals of whole words, vowels, consonant
    order, or syllables
  • Consonant or vowel directionality (brithday)
  • Phonetic spellings of non-phonetic words
  • Wrong associations of sounds with letters

40
WJIII Cognitive Tests
  • 7 Clusters assessing processing areas underlying
    academic achievement
  • Comprehension-Knowledge
  • Long-Term Retrieval
  • Visual-Spatial Thinking
  • Auditory Processing/Phonemic Awareness
  • Fluid Reasoning
  • Processing Speed
  • Short-term Memory
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