Title: Diagnosing Dyslexia:Its Not Just Numbers'
1Diagnosing DyslexiaIts Not Just Numbers.
- Teresa Oettinger Montani, Ed.D.
- Fairleigh Dickinson University
- montani_at_fdu.edu
2Definition of Dyslexia
- Specific Learning Disability
- Neurobiological in nature
- Difficulties with
- Accurate and/or fluent word recognition
- Poor spelling
- Decoding abilities
3Definition 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
4Characteristics of Dyslexia
- Problems in Speaking
- Problems in Reading
- Strengths in higher level processes
5Guidelines 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
6Profile 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
7Profile Cont
- Spelling lt or to Word Recognition
- Word attack or lt reading single words in
isolation - Phonological awareness below age level
8Ability/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)
9What should we compare?
10Oral Language Ability/Achievement Discrepancy
- Compare oral language abilities to reading,
written language, and mathematics domains (Aaron,
1997 Badien, 1999 Spring French, 1990)
11Compare Listening Comprehension Reading
- More advantageous than comparing IQ reading
because.
12Concept of a discrepancy between reading and
listening can be easily understood
13This discrepancy is more related to a variety of
remedial strategies
14Readers without disabilities
- Levels of reading and listening comprehension are
generally similar
15What distinguishes a READING DISABILITY from a
POOR READER..
16LISTENING COMPREHENSION is higher than the
ability to decode words
- Rack, Snowling, Olson, 1992
17If students perform poorly on reading listening
comprehension, the problem is not unexplained or
unexpected
18Study 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..
19Phonemic AwarenessProcessing Speedand Print
20Tests that showed a difference
- PA Sound Blending Incomplete Words
- PS Visual Matching
- Print LWID, WA, RV, PC
21Tests that showed no difference between groups
- -Oral vocabulary
- Listening comprehension
- Memory for Sentences
- (Montani, Frawley, Smith, 2000).
22Phonological Processing
- Phonological Awareness-
- Ability to manipulate individual sounds within
words
23Phonological Memory
- Coding of information to store in working or
short-term memory - Look for deficits on weaknesses on measures of WM
STM
24Rapid Naming
- Quick retrieval of information from long term
store - Rapid Naming Measures on CTOPPS, WJIII, and
several other measures
25Interpreting 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
26Interpreting 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
27Test 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
28Children 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.
29Alphabet 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
30Alphabet 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
31Conventions 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
32Conventions 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
33Meaning 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
34Meaning 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.
35DIBELS
- Website http//dibels.uoregon.edu
- DIBELS measures are FREE to download and use.
- Kindergarten through Sixth Grade Benchmarks and
Progress Monitoring Booklets are available
36Gray Oral Reading Test-4
- Graded passages
- Measures rate, accuracy, fluency, and reading
comprehension - Multiple choice format
- Oral Reading Quotient
37Interpreting Writing TestsWJIII
- Writing Samples- connected discourse
- Editing
- Writing Fluency- rate/automaticity
- Spelling-
- Spelling of Sounds-
38Analysis 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
39Specific 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
40WJIII 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