ELN - Reading Assessment and Intervention: New research … · 2017. 2. 21. · Tabla 1 Medias,...

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Reading Assessment and Intervention: New research approach in early ages and learning disabilities Celestino Rodríguez Pérez University of Oviedo [email protected]

Transcript of ELN - Reading Assessment and Intervention: New research … · 2017. 2. 21. · Tabla 1 Medias,...

  • Reading Assessment and

    Intervention: New research

    approach in early ages and

    learning disabilitiesCelestino Rodríguez Pérez

    University of Oviedo

    [email protected]

  • Focus in

    ASSESMENT

    RESEARCH-PRACTICE

    that have beed adapted to

    EARLY YEARS

    with the tool called EPI.com

    and

    INTERVENTION

    LEARNING/ATTENTION

    New tools oportunities

    RAN/RAS

  • 3

    Impact in children development

    Develop without

  • INTRODUCTION

    Naming speed could be defined as the ability to name different

    type of familiar stimulus (objects, colours, letters and numbers) as

    quickly as possible. This ability is usually measured by Rapid

    automatized naming and Rapid Automatized Stimulus-RAN/RAS-

    (Wolf & Denckla, 2005) .

    Wolf, M., & Denckla, M. B. (2005). RAN/RAS: Rapid automatized naming and rapid alternating stimulus tests. Austin, TX :Pro-ed

    ASSESMENT

  • Objective

    1. Analyze the effectiveness of the RAN/RAS test for the early detection ofattentional and reading difficulties in Spanish language.

    2. Determine the power of times in naming speed and attentional variablesto predict group membership (LRD with/without ADHD).

    Method

    Participants: 101 students (64 men and 37 women) were divided into fourgroups:

    Instruments

    STUDY 1: NAMING SPEED AS A PREDICTOR OFREADING DISABILITIES AND ADHD

    40

    1428

    19

    Control RD ADHD ADHD+RD

    WISC-IV- (Wechsler, 2005)

    EDAH (Farré y Narbona, 1998)

    ASSESMENT

  • Results

    0

    10

    20

    30

    40

    50

    60

    70

    80

    Objects

    Colours

    Numbers

    Letters

    Letters and numbers

    MANCOVA showed that there were significant

    differences between four groups.

    (= 0.705; F(3,97)= 1.826; p=.023; η2=.110).

    STUDY 1: NAMING SPEED AS A PREDICTOR OFREADING DISABILITIES AND ADHD

    Objective 1

    ASSESMENT

  • STUDY 1: NAMING SPEED AS A PREDICTOR OFREADING DISABILITIES AND ADHD

    Results of discriminant analyses for predicting RLD group membership,

    using stepwise method. Analyses with RAN/RAS variables and ADHD

    symptoms for age conditions.

    Standardized

    Coefficients

    Function

    CoefficientsF

    RAN/RAS test from 5 to 9 years of age

    Raw.Col 1.000 .036 12.830

    Constant -2.341

    RAN/RAS test from 10 to 16 year of age

    Raw.Col 1.000 .124 10.171

    Constant -4.784

    Notes: Raw.Col= score obtained in naming colors.

    All models are significant at a p < .001 level. Only the variables that resulted statistically significant

    are shown.

    Objective 2

    Classified 78% of the

    sample correctly (83% CG

    and 74% RLD group)

    Classified 77%of the

    sample correctly (90% CG

    and 50 % RLD group)

  • Results of discriminant analyses for predicting ADHD group membership, using

    stepwise method. Analyses with RAN/RAS variables and ADHD symptoms for age

    conditions.

    Standardized

    Coefficients

    Function

    CoefficientsF

    RAN/RAS test from 5 to 9 years of age

    Raw.Col .609 .040 16.350

    EDAH.DA .769 .037 12.685

    Constant -5.810

    RAN/RAS test from 10 to 16 year of age

    EDAH.AD .606 .045 13.548

    EDAH.I/H .922 .049 10.187

    Constant -7.677

    Notes: Raw.Col= score obtained in naming colors; EDAH.AD = attention deficit symptoms; EDAH.I/H = impulsivity/

    hyperactivity symptoms.

    All models are significant at a p < .001 level. Only the variables that resulted statistically significant are shown

    STUDY 1: NAMING SPEED AS A PREDICTOR OFREADING DISABILITIES AND ADHD

    Objective 2

    Classified 84% of the

    sample correctly (65% CG

    and 96% ADHD group)

    Classified 77% of the

    sample correctly (83,3%

    CG and 71% RLD group)

  • Objective

    Analyze if the explanatory power of different variables (CI, age,

    gender, number and type of reading errors, omissions, commissions

    ...) changes depending on the type of difficulty analyzed.

    Method

    Participants: a total of 133 student were divided into four groups:

    Instruments

    34

    2241

    35

    Control RD ADHD ADHD+RD

    WISC-IV- (Wechsler, 2005)

    EDAH (Farré y Narbona, 1998)

    STUDY 2: NAMING SPEED AND ITS RELATIONSHIPWITH READING DISABILITIES AND ADHD

  • ResultsGroups Objects Colours Numbers Letters

    R2 F R2 F R2 F R2 F

    Control

    Step 1 .834 10.096*** .700 4.534* .511 6.951** .527 6.905**

    Step 2 .914 3.693* .755 3.212* .714 4.674* .784 3.461*

    Step 3 .936 2.792 .823 1.607 .728 2.819 .825 2.701

    RD

    Step 1 .554 5.789*** .494 4.560* .437 3.618* .565 6.055**

    Step 2 .709 3.485* .798 10.581*** .878 10.225*** .855* 8.394*

    Step 3 .772 2.367 .826 9.073** .880 5.117* .954 14.365***

    ADHD

    Step 1 .505 5.777*** .373 3.373* .437 4.392- .584 7.940**

    Step 2 .751 5.610** .672 3.810* .691 4.174* .749 5.538**

    Step 3 .825 4.698** .781 3.563* .711 2.459 .856 5.922*

    ADHD+RD

    Step 1 .367 5.984** .386 6.508** .304 4.517** .385 6.479**

    Step 2 .458 3.256** .509 4.000** .387 2.437* .540 4.532*

    Step 3 .547 2.902* .556 3.00* .391 1.539 .541 2.833*

    * p < .05, **< .01; ***< .005

    STUDY 2: NAMING SPEED AND ITS RELATIONSHIPWITH READING DISABILITIES AND ADHD

  • As previous researches confirmed, students with reading

    disabilities and ADHD obtained lower scores in RAN/RAS test

    than the CG.

    RAN/RAS presented better discrimination between groups in

    early ages, when participants aged form 5 to 9.

    The explanatory power of attentional and reading variables

    changes considerably depends on the diagnostic group

    analised.

    Reading errors present a larger explanatory power when studentspresented a reading difficulty.

    TOVA variables only is considered relevant indexes when studentspresented attentional problems.

    CONCLUSIONS

  • are

    ORGANIZED OF KNOWLEDGE

    THE HYPERTEXTS

    have been implemented in students

    STUDY 1 (3-6 years old)that have beed adapted to

    EARLY YEARS

    STUDY 2(6-8 years old)

    Cueli, M., Rodríguez, C., Álvarez, A.I., Areces, D., & González-Castro, P. (In

    press). Effectiveness of the computerized tool EPI.com to enhance

    comprehension and expression in students aged 3 to 6. Journal of

    Psychodidactics

    AUTHORS??? (2017). Strategy EPI.com Primary Education first

    grades. In review

    INTERVENTION

  • Adapted hypertext to early years: EPI.com

    Aim The hypertext is a network of processes that foster understanding and expression. It

    allows the training of learning strategies

    The application at early ages, before the subject read and write, stimulates the three

    types of processing: lexical, semantic and syntactic and enhances the read and the

    write.

    ¿How? 3 networks

    3 representations

    Forms Paper

    Computer

    La oveja

    EPI.COM.wmv

  • followed as method

    INSTRUMENTSPARTICIPANTS DATA ANALYSIS

    – 155 children, aged 3-6 (M = 4.185, SD = 0.824), 80 girls and 75 boys.

    – Two groups: Experimental Group (n = 93; follows the EPI.com intervention) and Control Group (n = 62; follows traditional methodology).

    – The sample was classified in three groups: Group 1 (65 students; 3 years), Group 2 (55 students; 4 years), Group 3 (35 students; 5 years).

    – No statistically relevant differences according to age F(1, 153) = 0.548, p = .460, p

    2 = .004; IQ F(1, 153) = 0.074, p = .786, p2 = .000 and sex χ2(1) = 0.161,

    p = .688.

    STUDY 1INTERVENTION

  • followed as method

    STUDY 1

    INSTRUMENTSPARTICIPANTS DATA ANALYSIS

    – The PEABODY picture vocabulary test (Dunn, Dunn, & Arribas 2010)

    – The Illinois Test of Psycholinguistic abilities ITPA (Kirk, McCarthy, & Kirk, 1986)• 11 variables: auditory comprehension, visual comprehension, auditory association, visual

    association, verbal expression, motor expression, grammatical integration, visual integration, auditory integration, sequential auditory memory and sequential visual-motor memory.

    – Intervention tool: EPI.com• Three times a week for three months, with 45-minute sessions during which the

    intervention took place in presence of the class tutor.

    INTERVENTION

  • Table 1

    Means and standard deviations for the pre-test and post-test variables in the PEABODY test and ITPA Pre-test Post-test

    EG

    (n = 93)

    CG

    (n = 62)

    EG

    (n = 93)

    CG

    (n = 62)

    M(SD) M(SD) M(SD) M(SD) F

    (1, 153) p

    2

    Peabody 41.78(19.07) 40.59(17.68) 45.72(20.57) 39.77(17.59) 3.479 0.02

    Auditory Comprehension 8.48(7.26) 8.37(849) 11.64(10.04) 8.08(8.49) 5.286* 0.03

    Visual Comprehension 7.83(3.93) 7.35(4.27) 10.33(4.86) 6.88 (4.20) 20.75*** 0.11

    Visual Memory 2.05(2.32) 1.93(2.30) 3.54(3.18) 1.87 (2.41) 12.45*** 0.07

    Auditory Association 7.81(4.44) 7.38(5.07) 10.48(5.33) 6.77(4.77) 19.52*** 0.11

    Auditory Memory 3.95(1.96) 3.77(2.19) 5.50(3.140) 3.62(2.15) 16.84*** 0.09

    Visual Association 5.67(4.96) 5.30(5.40) 9.24(6.754) 4.95(5.18) 17.98*** 0.10

    Visual Integration 13.47(4.73) 12.87(5.47) 17.66(7.19) 12.48(5.43) 23.28*** 0.13

    Verbal Expression 15.51(8.58) 14.58(9.18) 22.21(11.38) 13.83(8.86) 23.88*** 0.13

    Grammatical Integration 7.17(4.16) 6.83(4.59) 12.16(5.69) 6.06(4.60) 49.44*** 0.24

    Motor Expression 11.77(5.19) 11.06(5.80) 13.79(5.50) 10.91(5.95) 9.50** 0.05

    Auditory Integration 6.30(4.39) 5.61(4.69) 8.01(5.21) 5.83(4.70) 6.96** 0.04

    Note. M = Mean, SD = Standard Deviation EG = Experimental Group, CG = Control Group

    * p < .05, ** p < .01, *** p < .001.

    INTERVENTION

  • 0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    Pretest Postest

    Visual integration

    3

    4

    5

    0

    10

    20

    30

    40

    Pretest Postest

    Verbal expression

    3

    4

    5

    0

    2

    4

    6

    8

    10

    12

    14

    Pretest Postest

    Gramatical expression

    3

    4

    5

    02468

    101214

    Pretest Postest

    3 años

    Visualintegration

    Verbalexpression

    Gramaticalexpression

    0

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    10

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    20

    25

    30

    4 años

    Visualintegration

    Verbalexpression

    Gramaticalexpression

    0

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    40

    5 años

    Visualintegration

    Verbalexpression

    Gramaticalexpression

  • followed as method

    STUDY 2

    INSTRUMENTSPARTICIPANTS DATA ANALYSIS

    – 62 children, aged 6-7 (M = 6.887, SD = 0.564), 30 girls and 32 boys.

    – Two groups: Experimental Group (n = 38; follows the EPI.com intervention) and Control Group (n = 24; follows traditional methodology).

    – The sample was classified in two groups in function of the grade: Group 1 (30 students; first grade), Group 2 (32 students; second grade).

    – No statistically relevant differences according to age F(1, 60) = 0.50, p = .823, p

    2 = .001; F(1, 60) = 0.626, p = .432, p2 = .010; and sex χ2(1) = 0.065, p =

    .799.

  • Tabla 1

    Medias, desviaciones típicas para las variables prestest y postest del Peabody e ITPA y

    diferencias en el postest entre el GE y el GC

    Pretest Postest

    GE

    (n = 38)

    GC

    (n = 24)

    GE

    (n = 38)

    GC

    (n = 24)

    M(DT) M(DT) M(DT) M(DT) F

    (1, 60)

    p2

    Peabody 82.26(17.99) 78.91(18.37) 87.60(20.90) 77.45(19.01)

    Auditory Comprehension 32.39(11.95) 31.04(12.76) 35.97(12.55) 30.12(12.90) 3.12 0.05

    Visual Comprehension 13.52(3.81) 12.87(5.39) 15.73(4.55) 12.62 (5.28) 6.06* 0.09

    Visual Memory 8.15(3.62) 7.58(4.05) 9.71(3.95) 7.29 (4.26) 5.18* 0.07

    Auditory Association 17.60(6.88) 16.95(6.82) 20.36(7.30) 16.50(8.54) 3.61 0.05

    Auditory Memory 7.78(2.50) 7.66(3.54) 9.76(3.72) 7.50(3.34) 5.86* 0.08

    Visual Association 16.94(5.93) 17.00(7.25) 21.92(6.98) 16.54(7.71) 8.31** 0.12

    Visual Integration 24.00(5.25) 24.00(7.34) 29.05(6.99) 23.87(7.43) 7.68** 0.11

    Verbal Expression 32.60(8.97) 33.75(12.41) 44.73(12.69) 31.95(12.82) 14.79

    ***

    0.19

    Grammatical Integration 16.52(5.88) 15.95(6.10) 22.42(5.66) 14.95(6.57) 22.54

    ***

    0.27

    Motor Expression 21.02(4.54) 20.45(5.69) 22.97(5.49) 20.62(5.45) 2.69 0.04

    Auditory Integration 13.92(5.81) 13.70(5.60) 15.94(6.19) 13.50(6.06) 2.33 0.03

    Nota. M = Media, DT = Desviación Típica, GE = Grupo Experimental, GC = Grupo Control.

    * p

  • 0

    5

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    45

    PRE POST

    First grade

    Visual integration

    Verbal expression

    Gramaticalexpression

    0

    10

    20

    30

    40

    50

    60

    PRE POST

    Second grade

    Visual integration

    Verbal expression

    Gramaticalexpression

    0

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    35

    Pretest Postest

    Visual integration

    First grade

    Second grade

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    Pretest Postest

    Verbal expression

    First grade

    Second grade

    0

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    Pretest Postest

    Gramatical expression

    First grade

    Second grade

  • It works in other languages?

  • Does he/she understand oral messages according with

    her/his age?

    Does he/she understand visual histories?

    Can he/she reproduce visual stimuli once memorized?

    Can he/she complete unfinished sentences?

    Can he/she reproduce even larger series of numbers?

    Can he/she associate iconic-symbolic representations

    associated each other?

    Can he/she identify iconic-symbolic representations?

    Can he/she say different words associated to once given

    word?

    Can he/she unfinished sentences with given words?

    Can he/she reproduce with gestures given words (iconic-

    simbolic representation?

    Can he/she identify unfinished oral words?

    EBI ENGLISH TEACHERS QUESTIONNAIRE

  • 0

    0,05

    0,1

    0,15

    0,2

    0,25

    0,3

    0,35

    0,4

    GE PRE

    GE POST

    -0,05

    0

    0,05

    0,1

    0,15

    0,2

    0,25

    0,3

    0,35

    0,4

    0,45

    GE PRE

    GE POST

    ITPA EBI

  • Conclussions

    In the two studies:

    EPI.com proves to be effective in interventions on those aspects, hence the

    importance of implementing interventions at early ages which lay the

    foundation for future learning.

    Besides, although the improvement in verbal aspects is not significant, the

    means observed show higher scores in the EG than in the CG.

    The profile by age and grade showed:

    More positive results among the youngest students.

    In the two studies,….

    The effect sizes were systematically larger in three variables: visual

    integration, verbal expression and grammatical integration.

    These results point at a more positive evolution in semantic processing

    (variables such as visual comprehension) and also in syntactic processing

    (visual, grammatical… integration).

  • ThanksCelestino Rodríguez Pérez

    University of Oviedo

    https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Celestino_Rodriguez

    [email protected]

    COST is supported by the EU Framework

    Programe Horizon 2020

    https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Celestino_Rodriguezmailto:[email protected]://europa.eu/index_pt.htmhttp://europa.eu/index_pt.htm