Literature DB >> 29033694

Reading Development in Typically Developing Children and Children With Prenatal or Perinatal Brain Lesions: Differential School Year and Summer Growth.

Özlem Ece Demir-Lira1, Susan C Levine1.   

Abstract

Summer slide, uneven growth of academic skills over the calendar year, captures the fact that the learning gains children make over the school year do not continue at the same pace over the summer, when children are typically not in school. We compared growth of reading skills during the school year and over the summer months in children with pre-or perinatal brain lesion (PL) and typically-developing (TD) children from varying socioeconomic status (SES) backgrounds as a new way to probe the role of structured environmental support in functional plasticity for reading skills in children with PL. Results showed that children with PL performed lower than TD children on both reading decoding and reading comprehension. Group differences were primarily driven by children with larger lesions and children with right hemisphere lesions (RH). For reading comprehension, children with RH showed greater growth during the school year but more slide during the summer months than both TD children and children with left hemisphere lesions, implicating a particularly strong role of structured input in supporting reading comprehension in this group. TD children from lower SES backgrounds fell behind their TD peers from higher SES backgrounds on decoding and reading comprehension, but did not show differential patterns of school year and summer growth. Overall, results highlight the importance of considering the role of a host of factors interacting at multiple levels of analyses, including biological and environmental, in influencing developmental trajectories of typically and atypically-developing children.

Entities:  

Year:  2016        PMID: 29033694      PMCID: PMC5639475          DOI: 10.1080/15248372.2016.1200049

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cogn Dev        ISSN: 1524-8372


  27 in total

1.  Discourse plasticity in children after stroke: age at injury and lesion effects.

Authors:  Sandra Bond Chapman; Jeffrey E Max; Jacquelyn F Gamino; Jenny H McGlothlin; Starr N Cliff
Journal:  Pediatr Neurol       Date:  2003-07       Impact factor: 3.372

2.  How learning to read changes the cortical networks for vision and language.

Authors:  Stanislas Dehaene; Felipe Pegado; Lucia W Braga; Paulo Ventura; Gilberto Nunes Filho; Antoinette Jobert; Ghislaine Dehaene-Lambertz; Régine Kolinsky; José Morais; Laurent Cohen
Journal:  Science       Date:  2010-11-11       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  Environmental input and cognitive growth: a study using time-period comparisons.

Authors:  J Huttenlocher; S Levine; J Vevea
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  1998-08

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Authors:  S E Shaywitz; B A Shaywitz; K R Pugh; R K Fulbright; R T Constable; W E Mencl; D P Shankweiler; A M Liberman; P Skudlarski; J M Fletcher; L Katz; K E Marchione; C Lacadie; C Gatenby; J C Gore
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1998-03-03       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  The effects of right hemisphere damage on the pragmatic interpretation of conversational remarks.

Authors:  J A Kaplan; H H Brownell; J R Jacobs; H Gardner
Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  1990-02       Impact factor: 2.381

Review 6.  The effects of poverty on children.

Authors:  J Brooks-Gunn; G J Duncan
Journal:  Future Child       Date:  1997 Summer-Fall

7.  Right hemispheric dominance of inhibitory control: an event-related functional MRI study.

Authors:  H Garavan; T J Ross; E A Stein
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1999-07-06       Impact factor: 11.205

8.  Language deficits after apparent clinical recovery from childhood aphasia.

Authors:  B T Woods; S Carey
Journal:  Ann Neurol       Date:  1979-11       Impact factor: 10.422

9.  Development itself is the key to understanding developmental disorders.

Authors:  A Karmiloff-Smith
Journal:  Trends Cogn Sci       Date:  1998-10-01       Impact factor: 20.229

10.  Language development after unilateral brain injury.

Authors:  H M Feldman; A L Holland; S S Kemp; J E Janosky
Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  1992-01       Impact factor: 2.381

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