| Literature DB >> 35755852 |
Amy E Barth1, Cathy Newman Thomas2.
Abstract
Middle and secondary grade students with disabilities that impact reading, including learning disabilities in reading (LD-R), high functioning autism (HFA), emotional and behavioral disorders (EBD), and students who are at-risk for reading failure due to the effect of poverty often struggle to make knowledge-based inferences while reading informational texts. As a result, this population of students is not able to read for understanding and learn from grade-level texts. Unfortunately, many special educators have had little preparation in how to develop their knowledge of inference-making or methods for explicitly teaching inference-making. Despite their lack of knowledge, special educators are often solely responsible for teaching skills that support reading comprehension, such as knowledge-based inference-making, to students with LD-R, EBD, HFA, and students reading below grade level. This article provides special educators, via self-directed learning, with information and resources to enhance their understanding of knowledge-based inferencing and methods for teaching knowledge-based inference-making to middle and secondary grade students with and at-risk for disabilities that impact reading achievement.Entities:
Keywords: adolescents; knowledge-based inference-making; reading comprehension; students with disabilities
Year: 2021 PMID: 35755852 PMCID: PMC9221988 DOI: 10.1177/10534512211024929
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Interv Sch Clin ISSN: 1053-4512