Literature DB >> 30636789

Using Moderator Analysis to Identify the First-Grade Children Who Benefit More and Less from a Reading Comprehension Program: A Step Toward Aptitude-by-Treatment Interaction.

Douglas Fuchs1, Devin M Kearns2, Lynn S Fuchs1, Amy M Elleman3, Jennifer K Gilbert1, Samuel Patton1, Peng Peng4, Donald L Compton5.   

Abstract

Because of the importance of teaching reading comprehension to struggling young readers and the infrequency with which it has been implemented and evaluated, we designed a comprehensive first-grade reading comprehension program. We conducted a component analysis of the program's decoding/fluency (DF) and reading comprehension (COMP) dimensions, creating DF and DF+COMP treatments to parse the value of COMP. Students (N = 125) were randomly assigned to the 2 active treatments and controls. Treatment children were tutored 3 times per week for 21 weeks in 45-min sessions. Children in DF and DF+COMP together performed more strongly than controls on word reading and comprehension. However, pretreatment word reading appeared to moderate these results such that children with weaker beginning word reading across the treatments outperformed similarly low-performing controls to a significantly greater extent than treatment children with stronger beginning word reading outperformed comparable controls. DF+COMP children did not perform better than DF children. Study limitations and implications for research and practice are discussed.

Entities:  

Year:  2018        PMID: 30636789      PMCID: PMC6327974          DOI: 10.1177/0014402918802801

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Except Child        ISSN: 0014-4029


  1 in total

1.  Is "Response/No Response" Too Simple a Notion for RTI Frameworks? Exploring Multiple Response Types With Latent Profile Analysis.

Authors:  Peng Peng; Douglas Fuchs; Lynn S Fuchs; Eunsoo Cho; Amy M Elleman; Devin M Kearns; Samuel Patton; Donald L Compton
Journal:  J Learn Disabil       Date:  2020-07-04
  1 in total

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