Title: A Comparison of Phonological Awareness Intervention Approaches
1A Comparison of Phonological Awareness
Intervention Approaches
- Lesley Raisor, Ph.D. CCC-SLP
- Nancy Creaghead, Ph.D. CCC-SLP
- Christina Yeager, M.A. CCC-SLP
2Session Objectives
- After this session, you will be able to
- Identify 2 different approaches to phonological
awareness interventions and site research that
supports both approaches - Create lesson plans targeting phonological
awareness using both approaches - Share your knowledge of phonological awareness
intervention approaches with your colleagues
3Where we are headed
- 1. Review literature
- Traditional Phonological Awareness (P.A.)
Training - Contextualized P.A. Training
- 2. Discuss present study
- Detailed description of lesson plans and books
used - 3. Discuss lesson plan template
- Create your own plans
4For Review.
- Phonological awareness is the conscious attention
to the sound structure of language. -
- It is a broad skill that includes
- The ability to detect and produce rhyme
- The ability to segment speech into words,
syllables, and phonemes - The ability to detect and manipulate phonemes
(Gillon, 2004)
5Phonological Awareness
- The predictive power of phonological awareness
for later literacy outcomes has prompted
educators to develop interventions targeting
phonological awareness skills in children at-risk
for qualifying for special education services.
6What have we learned from research in
phonological awareness?
7Traditional Phonological Awareness Interventions
- Ball and Blachman (1991)--classroom-based
phonological awareness intervention successful
for later reading and spelling - 15 hours of direct intervention.
- Kindergarteners (placed in groups of four or
five) were taught to use tiles to represent
phonemes in words. - Engaged in segmentation activities and tasks that
targeted letter-sound correspondence. - The results of the research revealed large gains
in not only phoneme segmentation ability, but
also in reading and spelling.
8Traditional Phonological Awareness Interventions
- Lundberg, Frost, and Peterson (1988)phonological
awareness can be trained in non-readers - Provided 235 kindergarten children who were
non-readers with training in metalinguistic
awareness (no training in letter-sound) - Intervention group outperformed a control group
on word, syllable, and phoneme segmentation and
synthesis tasks
9Traditional Phonological Awareness Interventions
- Bradley and Bryant (1985)early phonological
awareness training can affect later reading and
spelling - 65 kindergarten children participated 40 minute
training sessions spread over two years - Taught to group pictures corresponding to words
that began with the same phoneme - Taught to categorize words that shared the same
rime unit, by sorting picture cards into sets of
words that rhymed with one another - When childrens reading and spellings abilities
were measured when they were 8 years old, the
experimental phonological awareness group were
ahead of the control children in reading by 8-10
months (reading) and 17 months (spelling)
10Problems with Traditional Approaches
- McGee Purcell-Gates (1997) traditional
approaches are - removed from childrens daily literacy
experiences and - are not responsive to individual differences in
childrens knowledge. - Likewise, the National Reading Panel
(2000)--phonological awareness instruction should
be integrated into a childs general literacy
learning. - Further, although many of the traditional drill
approaches have been effective in increasing the
skills of school-aged children (five and
six-year-olds), this training approach may not be
developmentally appropriate for younger preschool
children.
11Alternate Strategy for Phonological Awareness
Training
- Richgels, Poremba, and McGee (1996) studied an
approach that more closely aligns with
constructivist aspects of emergent literacy
philosophy. - Described ways educators can guide children in a
meaningful and functional literacy-based context
for learning phonological awareness. -
12Alternate Strategy for Phonological Awareness
Training
- Naturalistic or contextual phonological awareness
training-- utilizes childrens books to teach
children about the sounds of language. - Ukrainetz et al. (2000)--contextualized
instruction led to gains in phonological
awareness compared to a non-treatment control
group. - Raisor (2002)--contextualized phonological
awareness intervention led to significant gains
in phonological awareness skills of children with
language learning problems.
13Research Needed to Compare Both Approaches
- Traditional drill approach -- based upon early
behaviorist theories of learning - Contextualized approaches -- grounded in
socio-cultural/constructivist theories of
cognition and learning. - While the research into naturalistic
interventions described above is promising,
systematic research comparing the effectiveness
of this approach to the traditional sequenced and
structured method is lacking.
14Purpose and Research Question
- The purposewas to compare the effectiveness of
two types of phonological awareness programs (a
structured drill approach and a contextualized
approach) in increasing the early literacy skills
of preschool children at-risk for reading
failure. - Research question
- Is there a significant difference in the early
phonological awareness/early literacy skills
among intervention group (drill and naturalistic)
and a control group as result of a four-week
phonological awareness intervention?
15Methods Participants
- Research Site an inner city Head Start located
in a large Midwestern city. - 150 children
- Random assignment to classrooms
- Children 44 children participated (average age
4 years 9 months) - Three classrooms in drill (17 children)
- Three classrooms in naturalistic (17 children)
- Two classrooms in control (10 children)collected
2 years later - Graduate Students 8 Speech-Language Pathology
Masters Students served as test administrators
and interveners - Reduced researcher biases
- Offered better control than using teachers
16Methods Assessment Tools
- (1).Portions of The Phonological Awareness Test
(Robertson Salter, 1997) Because there is no
standardized test of phonological awareness for
use with children under five (see review in
Justice, Invernizzi, Meier, 2002), portions of
The Phonological Awareness Test were administered
informally. - Rhyme discrimination/production, word and
syllable segmentation, and initial sound
isolation. - (2).The Test of Early Reading Abilities3
(TERA-3) This is a standardized test normed on
children ages 3-10 years (Reid, Hresko, Hammill,
2001). It has three subtests alphabet
knowledge, conventions (measuring childrens
understanding of print concepts), and meaning
(measuring childrens ability to comprehend the
meaning of printed material).
17Methods Graduate Student Training
- Following recruitment, graduate students were
required to attend a two week-long project
orientation/training. - This training involved three aspects
- (1) the administration of the testing protocols
- (2) the implementation of the drill-approach to
phonological awareness training and - (3) the implementation of the naturalistic
approach to phonological awareness training. - Included opportunities for supervised practice
with test administration and the phonological
awareness interventions.
18Methods Phonological Awareness Interventions
- 1. Administered assessment tools
- 2. Classrooms were randomly assigned to receive
the drill-approach or naturalistic treatment. - -A control group was recruited at a later time.
- -There were three classrooms in each of the
treatment conditions, and two classrooms in the
control group. - -Each group received the same amount of
intervention (two 20 minute sessions per week for
4 weeks). The control group did not receive any
intervention. - 3. Graduate students re-administered both tests.
19Methods Drill Approach
- Utilized procedures from other well-known
phonological awareness studies (Lundberg, Frost,
Peterson, 1988 van Kleeck, 1995). - Shaping procedures, with structured hierarchies
controlling task complexity (McFadden, 1998
Ukrainetz, Cooney, Dyer, Kysar, Harris, 2000
Gillon, 2004). - A target skill will be selected for a one-week
period - 1st week -rhyme discrimination and production
- 2nd week-word segmentation
- 3rd week-syllable segmentation
- 4th week- initial sound isolation.
20Methods Naturalistic Approach
- Naturalistic phonological awareness intervention
incorporated scaffolding to support individual
student responses. - Allowed other children to scaffold
- Working within the Zone of Proximal Development
(ZPD) - More than one type of phonological awareness
skill was incidentally explored at a time
(Ukrainetz, 2006). - Lesson plans for the naturalistic approach were
those that were used for the pilot-project of
this research (performed in the summer of 2002).
21Methods Naturalistic Approach
- A storybook was included in every session. Every
session began with readiness interactions,
modeled from Cochran-Smiths (1984) research. -
- Each lesson plan targeted a specific skill,
however, other phonological awareness skills were
also addressed in each session. - After the graduate student had finished reading
the book, she asked children to participate in a
follow-up activity that was meaning-based.
22Methods Drill Approach
- Week 2
- Sentence Segmentation.
- We are going to clap for each word we hear today.
I am going to say a sentence, and I want you to
clap for each word you hear. - I love my mom.
- Turn on the television.
- My cat is big.
- Lets read a book.
- I want to play.
- The dog has a large nose.
- My computer is not working.
- The clown likes balloons.
- The candle is hot.
- The boy has a spoon.
- The refrigerator is cold.
- My pillow is big and soft.
- The spring flowers are so pretty.
- Daddy said no.
- The remote control is under the couch.
23Methods Naturalistic Approach
- 2nd Week Frog Theme
- Materials Needed. Jump, Frog, Jump
- Laminated characters of the story (frog, fly,
snake, etc.) glued to craft sticks (make three
for each character). - 12-15 multi-colored lily pads
- Upbeat music
- CD player
- Joint Book Reading Suggestions.
- Have the children look at the cover of the book
and guess who will be the characters in the
story. - Assign each child a character in the story and
give them the respective character on a craft
stick (Some characters will need to be repeated
among the children). Instruct the children to
hold up their character each time it is
mentioned. - This book contains a great deal of rhythm. Read
the story with a lot of inflection. You may have
children clap as you read (only if you are not
asking them to hold up the characters). - Extension Sentence Segmentation Activity.
- Have children jump (from lily pad to lily pad)
for each word they hear in a simple sentence from
the book) (NOTE You will have to simplify the
sentences.some of the sentences from the book
are very complex). - You may play a game with music (having the
children freeze on a lily pad when the music
stops), and then ask them to jump in place on
their lily pad for each word in a simple
sentence.
24Schedule of Treatment
25Results
- SPSS software was used to analyze the data
collected. - One-way ANOVAs were computed for each
intervention group at pre-test to ensure that
intervention groups were not significantly
different at pre-test. - Syllable segmentation (plt .05) (naturalistic
intervention group mean significantly higher than
the drill or control groups). - Repeated measures ANOVAs
- group assignment (naturalistic, drill, or
control-group) as a between-subjects factor - time as a within-subjects factor for each measure
(rhyme discrimination, rhyme production, sentence
segmentation, syllable segmentation, initial
sound isolation, total phonological awareness,
alphabet knowledge, print concepts, and meaning).
26Rhyme Discrimination
27Sentence Segmentation
28Total Phonological Awareness
29Alphabet Knowledge
30Print Concepts
31Discussion Summary of Results
- Both interventions were successful compared to
control group for - Rhyme Discrimination, Sentence Segmentation,
Total Phonological Awareness - Naturalistic intervention successful for Print
Concepts - Naturalistic Intervention group demonstrating
larger gains - Alphabet Knowledge
- Unexplained growth for drill group
32Discussion TPA, Rhyme Discrimination, Sentence
Segmentation,
- These results are consistent with results of
other studies regarding the efficacy of - Traditional drill-based phonological awareness
training (Ball Blackman 1991 Bradley Bryant,
1983 Herrera, 1993 Lundberg, Frost, Peterson,
1988 Schneider et al., 1997) and - Contextualized intervention programs (Richgels,
Poremba, McGee, 1996 Ukrainetz et al., 2000). - Gillon (2004) suggested that both approaches to
phonological awareness training (skill mastery
approach, i.e. drill, and integrated multiple
skill approach, i.e. naturalistic) may be useful
as she set forth guiding principles to
phonological awareness intervention programs.
33Discussion Rhyme Discrimination and Sentence
Segmentation
- Both intervention groups made gains, but the
control groups scores actually declined slightly
(creating an interaction effect) - Bradley Bryant (1983) targeted phonological
awareness in a traditional waychildren made
significant gains - Richgels, Poremba, and McGee (1996) targeted
phonological awareness in naturalistic
waychildren made significant gains
34Discussion Rhyme Production
- Rhyme Production results similar to van Kleeck
et al. (1998) children made gains in other
phonological awareness skills, yet did not make
progress in rhyme production following
intervention. - Current studychildren errors were because of a
semantic retrieval bias - Children not metalinguistically ready to view
words outside of their semantic purpose. - Another explanation--Production may require
higher cognitive processes than other measures of
rhyming skills (discrimination, categorization,
and oddity tasks) - Also, perhaps the tax on phonological working
memory (memory that involves temporarily holding
the speech sound features of a word, so it can be
analyzed or manipulated) was too much for the
preschool children (Troia, 2004).
35Discussion Initial Sound Isolation
- Initial Sound Isolation There was not a
significant difference between groups, nor was
there an interaction effect. - Liberman (1974)children less than 5 years old
often have difficulty with this task - Gillon (2004) argues that phonemic level
awareness has generally been considered to
develop in kindergarten and beyond - Ukrainetz (2006)Kindergarten is when major
changes can be observed in phoneme-level skills - Although other researchers disagree. Bradley
Bryant (1985), Lundberg, Frost, Peterson,
1988) Lundberg et al. (1990).
36Discussion Early Literacy Skills
- Alphabet Knowledge There was an interaction
effect between intervention and time. - A look at the means shows a large change in
alphabet knowledge for the drill group - Letter-knowledge was not explicitly addressed in
the drill intervention - Classroom teachers attention to letter knowledge
was not controlled for.
37Discussion Early Literacy Skills
- Print Concepts There was a significant
difference between the naturalistic group and the
control group and drill group. Children
experienced exposure to print and the storybooks
in the naturalistic intervention, whereas the
drill and control groups did not. - Ezell, Justice, and Parsons (2000) investigated
the efficacy of a shared-book reading
intervention designed to foster parents
strategies for stimulating preschoolers learning
of print concepts. - The intervention was effective in stimulating
childrens concepts of print, as children made
gains in a print knowledge protocol adapted from
Clays Concepts about Print assessment (1979)
after only a five-week period. - Meaning No significant differences among groups
- This subtest might not accurately measure a
childs ability to make meaning from print
sources. Many of the test items were related to
alphabet knowledge
38Discussion Drill Intervention
- Our drill-based activities provided each child
explicit opportunities to practice a given skill
- In the present study, the drill-based approach
ensured that each child had an opportunity to
respond to two target phonological awareness
stimuli. - The National Reading Panel, 2000 argued that
phonological awareness instruction should be
explicit - However, Ukrainetz (2006) argues that this type
of explicit instruction teaches children how to
do well on tests of phonological awareness. - Children were asked to respond to the targets in
ways similar to the testing situation.
Therefore, children in the drill group
practiced taking phonological awareness tests
at each training session.
39Discussion Summary
- Naturalistic intervention successful compared to
a control group for increasing childrens print
concepts. - Naturalistic and drill groups were both
successful for increasing childrens rhyme
discrimination, sentence segmentation ability,
and total phonological awareness compared to a
control group. - It may be more beneficial to select a
naturalistic intervention strategy for early
preschool interventions due to added benefit of
increasing print concepts in children in the
naturalistic group.
40Discussion Limitations/Future Research
- Following children longitudinally to determine if
the effects of the two strategies carry on for
later reading and spelling - Longer intervention cycles
- Alternative methods of assessment
- Authentic assessments using childrens literature
- Alternative ways of assessing rhyme
41Your suggestions for further research??
42Contact Information
- Lesley Raisor, raisorlj_at_email.uc.edu
- 513-221-4243
- Christina Yeager, yeagercj_at_email.uc.edu
- Nancy Creaghead, nancy.creaghead_at_uc.edu
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