| Literature DB >> 28579668 |
Jeremy Miciak1, Karla K Stuebing2, Sharon Vaughn3, Greg Roberts4, Amy Elizabeth Barth5, Jack M Fletcher6.
Abstract
No studies have investigated the cognitive attributes of middle school students who are adequate and inadequate responders to Tier 2 reading intervention. We compared students in Grades 6 and 7 representing groups of adequate responders (n = 77) and inadequate responders who fell below criteria in (a) comprehension (n = 54); (b) fluency (n = 45); and (c) decoding, fluency, and comprehension (DFC; n = 45). These students received measures of phonological awareness, listening comprehension, rapid naming, processing speed, verbal knowledge, and nonverbal reasoning. Multivariate comparisons showed a significant Group-by-Task interaction: the comprehension-impaired group demonstrated primary difficulties with verbal knowledge and listening comprehension, the DFC group with phonological awareness, and the fluency-impaired group with phonological awareness and rapid naming. A series of regression models investigating whether responder status explained unique variation in cognitive skills yielded largely null results consistent with a continuum of severity associated with level of reading impairment, with no evidence for qualitative differences in the cognitive attributes of adequate and inadequate responders.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 28579668 PMCID: PMC5457160 DOI: 10.17105/SPR-13-0052.1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: School Psych Rev ISSN: 0279-6015