Literature DB >> 17041078

Evidence-based practice, response to intervention, and the prevention of reading difficulties.

Laura M Justice1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: This article provides an evidence-based perspective on what school communities can do to lower the prevalence of reading difficulties among their pupils through preventive interventions. It also delineates the roles that speech-language pathologists (SLPs) might play in these interventions.
METHOD: This article is organized to first provide a broad overview of current directions in research, practice, and policy in educational interventions, with an emphasis on how the three are increasingly integrated to respond to evidence showing that American school children are underperforming in reading. Next, the concept of response to intervention (RTI) is described. RTI is an educational policy and practice that is grounded in the accumulated literature that focuses on how schools might better organize themselves to deliver multitiered reading interventions to reduce children's risk for reading disability. Last, this article provides three organizational principles that school-based professionals, including SLPs, might follow to deliver RTI interventions. IMPLICATIONS: This article provides an important and timely description of key concepts in the prevention of reading difficulties through proactive multitiered interventions. SLPs can draw on the suggestions presented here to inform their local efforts in implementing preventive literacy programs that are consistent with an RTI paradigm.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17041078     DOI: 10.1044/0161-1461(2006/033)

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lang Speech Hear Serv Sch        ISSN: 0161-1461            Impact factor:   2.983


  6 in total

1.  Lexical-semantic organization in children with specific language impairment.

Authors:  Li Sheng; Karla K McGregor
Journal:  J Speech Lang Hear Res       Date:  2010-02       Impact factor: 2.297

2.  Adequate versus inadequate response to reading intervention: an event-related potentials assessment.

Authors:  Peter J Molfese; Jack M Fletcher; Carolyn A Denton
Journal:  Dev Neuropsychol       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 2.253

3.  Word-level reading achievement and behavioral inattention: exploring their overlap and relations with naming speed and phonemic awareness in a community sample of children.

Authors:  Rhonda Martinussen; Teresa Grimbos; Julia L S Ferrari
Journal:  Arch Clin Neuropsychol       Date:  2014-09-01       Impact factor: 2.813

4.  Is a Response to Intervention (RTI) Approach to Preschool Language and Early Literacy Instruction Needed?

Authors:  Charles R Greenwood; Judith J Carta; Jane Atwater; Howard Goldstein; Ruth Kaminski; Scott McConnell
Journal:  Topics Early Child Spec Educ       Date:  2013-05-01

5.  Mathematics is differentially related to reading comprehension and word decoding: Evidence from a genetically-sensitive design.

Authors:  Nicole Harlaar; Yulia Kovas; Philip S Dale; Stephen A Petrill; Robert Plomin
Journal:  J Educ Psychol       Date:  2012-08

6.  Elizabeth Usher Memorial Lecture: Language is literacy is language - Positioning speech-language pathology in education policy, practice, paradigms and polemics.

Authors:  Pamela C Snow
Journal:  Int J Speech Lang Pathol       Date:  2016-02-09       Impact factor: 2.484

  6 in total

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