Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

38
Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120

Transcript of Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Page 1: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Dyslexia

Arizona IDA, 2015Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR

NICHD P50 HD52120

Page 2: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

NIH Centers• National Institute for Child Health and Human

Development (NICHD) funds 4 research centers on learning disabilities.

• Dyslexia is major focus.– Ongoing area of active research.– Goal is to bring you up to date.

Page 3: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Guiding Philosophy: Healthy Skepticism

• “The greatest enemy of the truth is not the lie—deliberate, contrived, and dishonest, but the myth—persistent, pervasive, and unrealistic.”– --John F. Kennedy

Page 4: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Myths about Dyslexia • Very common.

• Need to know myths as well as the truths.– Parents and students may believe common myths.

You need to know them to interact sensibly.

Page 5: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Picture Naming Exercise• You will see two pictures.• When you recognize the picture, name it out

loud.

• Ready?

Page 6: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

True or False?• Reversal errors (b for d, was for saw, 53 for 35)

are a defining feature of dyslexia.

6

Page 7: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Why Make Reversal Errors?• We did not evolve for reading. We recruit

brain regions that evolved for speech and vision.

Page 8: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Reading is an Unnatural Act• Reading and writing are too recent to be

selected for by human evolution.– Human language emerged roughly one million

years ago.– Cave paintings date from roughly 50,000 years

ago. Earliest known writing system developed only around 6,000 years ago.

Page 9: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

If We Haven’t Evolved for Reading, How do We Do It?

• By recruiting abilities that have evolved over time, primarily language and vision.

Page 10: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Word Form Area• Where visual images are stored, including

images of letters and words.• Also where actual visual images are processed

for things that mattered a lot for survival—like an image of a mountain lion.

Page 11: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Other Reasons for Reversal Errors in Reading

• b and d look alike.• b and d sound alike—both stop consonants.• confusing was for saw reflects arbitrary aspect

of English that it is read left to right.

Page 12: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

What’s the Story about Reversals?

• Children in 2nd grade with reading problems are reading at an early 1st-grade level, making routine 1st-grade errors.

• They just stand out because their peers are not longer making them.

Page 13: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

True or False• Eye tracking exercises are effective in

remediating dyslexia.

13

Page 14: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Are Faulty Eye-Movements the Problem?

• Read something you have handy.• How does it feel like your eyes are moving

across the page?

Page 15: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

What Should we Conclude about Role of Eye Movements in Dyslexia?

• Faulty eye movements not the cause of poor reading but a by-product of it!

Page 16: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

True or False• Dyslexia results from a language problem not

a visual problem.

16

Page 17: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

What We Think Dyslexia Is• Not something you are born with.

– Involves long-term actions of and interactions among:

• Genetic liabilities and assets.• Environmental liabilities and assets.

Page 18: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

How Reading is Affected• Primarily a word-level decoding problem

characterized by...– inability to sound out new words.– small pool of words read automatically

Page 19: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

What We Think Dyslexia Is• Unexpectedly poor reading that is due to a

problem in language not in vision.– Language system implicated is the phonological

system—used for processing speech sounds.

Page 20: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Phonological Awareness• Awareness of and access to the sound

structure or phonology of one’s language.– Spoken words of a language consist of strings of

phonemes—speech sounds that signal differences in meaning.

• “cat” has 3 phonemes, each represented by a letter.• Change the first one to /b/ and you get “bat.”

Page 21: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Phonological Awareness Plays Causal Role in Learning to Read

• To a child who can hear similarities and differences among “cat,” “rat,” and “hat,” their spellings (cat, rat, hat) are sensible.

• Impaired phonological awareness is a common characteristic of individuals with dyslexia.

Page 22: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Phonological Awareness can be Taught and Trained

• Every major reading series now includes lessons on phonological awareness.

• Training phonological awareness early can prevent or at least mitigate the severity of later word-level reading problems.– Early identification is critical to prevention.

Page 23: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

True or False?• Dyslexia is more common in boys than in girls.

23

Page 24: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Controversial: Two Views

• 1. Male vulnerability is a myth. Equal numbers of girls affected.

Page 25: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Controversial: Two Views

• It is a fact that more boys than girls are identified as having dyslexia.

• Given this fact, how could girls have a similar incidence of dyslexia?

Page 26: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Controversial: Two Views

• If you are a teacher and have a limited number of referrals, why might you be more likely to refer a boy than a girl?

Page 27: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Current Controversy: Two Views

• 2. Male vulnerability is real.– males roughly twice as likely to be affected.

Page 28: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Quinn and Wagner (JLD, in press)• What if everyone is tested? No referral

happens, so referral bias can’t occur.• Tested 5 cohorts of 2nd grade students (N =

491,000).• Results: Boys affected more than girls at

roughly 2 to 1.

Page 29: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

True or False?• Parents with dyslexia are more likely to have

children with dyslexia.

29

Page 30: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Familial Risk• Having a parent or sibling with dyslexia

increases risk, but does not mean a child will be affected.

Page 31: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

True or False?• Students with dyslexia commonly have

additional problems (e.g., ADHD, social problems).

31

Page 32: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Conclusions• 1. Reversal errors are not a cause or hallmark

characteristic of dyslexia.

Page 33: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Conclusions• 1. Reversal errors are not a cause or hallmark

characteristic of dyslexia.• 2. Faulty eye-movements are not a common

cause of dyslexia.

Page 34: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Conclusions• 1. Reversal errors are not a cause or hallmark

characteristic of dyslexia.• 2. Faulty eye-movements are not a common

cause of dyslexia.• 3. Dyslexia is a language problem not a visual

problem. Language problem resides in the phonological system.

Page 35: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Conclusions• 4. Dyslexia runs in families.

Page 36: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Conclusions• 4. Dyslexia runs in families.• 5. Children and adults with dyslexia may have

other problems (e.g., ADHD).

Page 37: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Conclusions• 4. Dyslexia runs in families.• 5. Children and adults with dyslexia may have

other problems (e.g., ADHD).• 6. Dyslexia occurs in boys and girls, but is

about twice as common in boys.

Page 38: Dyslexia Arizona IDA, 2015 Rick Wagner, FSU, FCRR NICHD P50 HD52120.

Questions?

38