| Literature DB >> 29691983 |
Antonette Seiler1, Suze Leitão1, Mara Blosfelds2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fluent word reading is a key characteristic of skilled reading, yet most children with reading disorders have impaired word-reading skills. Previous research has demonstrated that multi-component interventions targeting phonemic awareness and the alphabetic principle are effective for children with reading disorders. However, about 25% of children fail to respond to these interventions. While it has been difficult to isolate the active ingredient, the findings of some studies suggest that tasks targeting phonological recoding and orthographic processing are essential elements in improving decoding. AIMS: To develop and evaluate an intervention that specifically targets phonological recoding and orthographic processing (a decoding intervention) for children with persistent word-reading impairment. METHODS & PROCEDURES: A single-subject crossover design with multiple treatments was used to examine the efficacy of the decoding intervention (15 × 20-min sessions) compared with a language intervention that controlled for individual therapy time. Eight children (aged 7:6-8:11 years) with persistent word-reading impairment were randomly assigned to one of two intervention sequences. The effect of the decoding intervention was evaluated by (1) changes in decoding accuracy measured by performance on researcher-developed non-word lists; and (2) generalization to other standardized measures of reading. OUTCOMES &Entities:
Keywords: computer-supported intervention; decoding; dyslexia; orthographic processing; phonological recoding; reading disorder
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29691983 DOI: 10.1111/1460-6984.12388
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Lang Commun Disord ISSN: 1368-2822 Impact factor: 3.020