Amie E Grills1, Jack M Fletcher2, Sharon Vaughn3, Amy Barth4, Carolyn A Denton5, Karla K Stuebing2. 1. School of Education, Boston University, Boston, MA ; Department of Psychology, University of Houston, Houston, TX. 2. Department of Psychology, University of Houston, Houston, TX. 3. College of Education, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX. 4. Texas Institute of Measurement, Evaluation, and Psychology, University of Houston, Houston, TX. 5. Department of Pediatrics, University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, TX.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: For school-aged children with reading difficulties, an emerging and important area of investigation concerns determining predictors of intervention response. Previous studies have focused exclusively on cognitive and broadly defined behavioral variables. What has been missing, however, are studies examining anxiety, which is among the most commonly experienced difficulty for youth. OBJECTIVE: The present study examined anxiety among children classified as typically achieving or showing inadequate/adequate response following an intervention for reading problems. METHODS: Participants were 153 ethnically-diverse children (84 male, 69 female) evaluated in the winter and spring of their first-grade academic year. Children completed several standardized measures of reading achievement involving decoding and fluency along with a multidimensional anxiety rating scale. RESULTS: Repeated measures ANOVA revealed significant main effects for time and scale and significant interactions for time*scale and group*scale. Logistic regression examined whether anxiety predicted response to intervention (Y/N) at the end of the school-year. CONCLUSIONS: Results showed overall decreases in anxiety over time, with the exception of the harm avoidance area which increased and also interacted with group (children with decoding/fluency difficulties reported less harm avoidance than typically achieving children). The harm avoidance area was most pertinent across analyses highlighting the potential importance of targeting this area; however, none of the anxiety scales predicted response group at the end of the intervention. Ongoing research is needed in this area in order to identify characteristics of inadequate responders to reading intervention programs and/or inform interventions that incorporate these socioemotional factors.
BACKGROUND: For school-aged children with reading difficulties, an emerging and important area of investigation concerns determining predictors of intervention response. Previous studies have focused exclusively on cognitive and broadly defined behavioral variables. What has been missing, however, are studies examining anxiety, which is among the most commonly experienced difficulty for youth. OBJECTIVE: The present study examined anxiety among children classified as typically achieving or showing inadequate/adequate response following an intervention for reading problems. METHODS:Participants were 153 ethnically-diverse children (84 male, 69 female) evaluated in the winter and spring of their first-grade academic year. Children completed several standardized measures of reading achievement involving decoding and fluency along with a multidimensional anxiety rating scale. RESULTS: Repeated measures ANOVA revealed significant main effects for time and scale and significant interactions for time*scale and group*scale. Logistic regression examined whether anxiety predicted response to intervention (Y/N) at the end of the school-year. CONCLUSIONS: Results showed overall decreases in anxiety over time, with the exception of the harm avoidance area which increased and also interacted with group (children with decoding/fluency difficulties reported less harm avoidance than typically achieving children). The harm avoidance area was most pertinent across analyses highlighting the potential importance of targeting this area; however, none of the anxiety scales predicted response group at the end of the intervention. Ongoing research is needed in this area in order to identify characteristics of inadequate responders to reading intervention programs and/or inform interventions that incorporate these socioemotional factors.
Authors: Ronald C Kessler; Patricia Berglund; Olga Demler; Robert Jin; Kathleen R Merikangas; Ellen E Walters Journal: Arch Gen Psychiatry Date: 2005-06
Authors: Carolyn A Denton; Paul T Cirino; Amy E Barth; Melissa Romain; Sharon Vaughn; Jade Wexler; David J Francis; Jack M Fletcher Journal: J Res Educ Eff Date: 2011-01-01
Authors: Jack M Fletcher; Karla K Stuebing; Amy E Barth; Carolyn A Denton; Paul T Cirino; David J Francis; Sharon Vaughn Journal: School Psych Rev Date: 2011