Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Final Reflections

During our class meetings and readings for the Psychological Bases of Reading course, we have discussed and broken down the processes of reading. The brain is stimulated in many ways during reading and by reading that we never are even conscious of.  The process of reading manipulates many unconscious variables to simply read a passage. The following is a summary of those findings that were studied this semester.
We began our studies with a journal article by Perfetti and Hogaboam. This article was about the Relationship between single word decoding and reading comprehension skill. In reading this study we discovered how higher skilled and lower skilled readers compared on the decoding of words that they know the meanings of and on the words for which they did not know the meanings.
We also read an article about eye movements and reading. The parallel letter recognition model best explains the Word Superiority Effect, thus it is the best explanation for how letters are processed. This is based on the findings during eye movement studies that proved that words are processed as whole units rather than letter by letter.
Our discussion then turned to correlation. Correlation is a staple of reading research. We discussed ways to read correlation on charts. Correlation was included in every reading study and it was found that reading correlation and writing correlation go hand in hand.
Next we discussed orthographic knowledge. Orthographic knowledge is knowing how a word is spelled or how it should appear in text. Orthographic knowledge is built by exposure to print. Ways to expose students to print are many. These include, but are not limited to, word sorts; repeated readings, observations and tests help an instructor to measure orthographic knowledge over time. These instructors must have random assessments and random selections in order to achieve the best responses. Cassar and Treiman conducted a research study on the knowledge of double letters in English. The study showed students from kindergarten through college. Their interest in the study was to find out how orthographic knowledge plays a role in the letter choices of young children’s created spelling. This study shows us that with exposure to print, young children are able to generalize correct spellings. Even when students are unable to read independently, they are forming a knowledge of how letters work together and are ordered to form words. Exposing students to print is the key in the early grades in order to develop this understanding from the beginning.
We also studied the Amalgation Theory. This theory states that the way a word appears and the phonic spelling for a word contain glue that makes the word remember able.  Students who have the most problems with this are students with fluency and comprehension difficulties. Studies for the Amalgation Theory were based on two tests: wide reading and vocabulary study.
The Matthew Effects were our next topic. The Matthew Effects were named for a passage in the Bible. The Mathew Effect simply states that GPC, exposure to print, and vocabulary all work together when reading and form a reciprocal relationship. In applying the Matthew Effects, one would state that “The Rich get richer and the Poor get poorer.” Just as in reading, the good readers get better and the bad readers get worse. This happens because if one part of the reading process is lacking, then the cycle cannot be completed and thus there is no reciprocation. The Matthew Effect states that poor readers tend to read easier materials and fewer books than good readers do.  A poor reader’s vocabulary grows at a slower rate than students with a larger vocabulary because the books that they are being assigned have poorer quality vocabulary in them.  Students with a larger vocabulary read more and better comprehend the material they read.  A student’s vocabulary knowledge is affected by the amount of words they are exposed to.  Children with a lower vocabulary tend to define words in terms of the context that they were read in, while children with a larger vocabulary were able to define words in more general terms and show examples of the word meanings.
Exposing students to print at an early age still remains the most important factor in a student learning to read. Exposure to print leads to incidental learning. Students who are exposed to a wide variety of prints are more likely to be exposed to a richer vocabulary including tier one, tier two, and tier three words. Tier one vocabulary words are those words considered “high frequency” words. Tier two words are words that are not well known, but occur a lot in the text. Tier three words are domain specific content words. Cunningham and Stanovich’s research enhances Cassar’s by trying to separate phonological and orthographic processing skills in word recognition during the very earliest stages of reading acquisition.  They also asked if print exposure predicted variance in orthographic knowledge. Using several different measures, including the Stanford Achievement Test, phoneme deletion, phoneme transpostion, experimental spelling tasks, letter-string choice tasks, and Title Recongition Test, Cunningham and Stanovich proved there was a 40% correlation between exposure to print and orthographic knowledge for early readers.
Memory also plays a key factor in reading. There are three main parts to Bladdely’s model of working memory..  The three main parts are the central executive, phonological loop, and the visuo-spatial sketchpad. The central executive is a system responsible for the control and regulation of cognitive processes. The phonological loop deals with sound or phonological information. The visuo-spatial sketchpad holds information about what we see. It is used in the temporary storage and retrieval of spatial and visual information. The episodic buffer is the third part, it links information across domains to form integrated units of visual, spatial, and verbal information with time sequencing. The episodic buffer also forms links to long-term memory. The findings of the Daneman and Carpenter article were that the traditional short term memory tests of digit and word span tasks do not tax the processing component of the working memory test. Studies using such measures do not find strong correlations with reading. If a short memory test was used with heavier demands on processing, poor readers would have less attention left to retain information. The reading span test was correlated significantly .90 with the pronominal reference test and .72 with the fact retrieval task. Its correlation with the global assessment reading comprehension (Verbal SAT) was also significant: r = .59. The word span task correlated non-significantly only .33, .37, and .35 with the reading tests respectively. The results indicate that the reading span task is related to working memory capacity.

Next, we covered phonemes. A phoneme is the smallest unit of sound that differentiates meaning. Full phoneme awareness is built over time by blending sounds and deleting sounds. The stages of learning are: beginning sound, beginning and ending sound, beginning sound, vowel sound, ending sound, beginning sound, vowel sound, ending sound, and attention to vowel markers. During this study, we also discussed graphemes. A grapheme is a combination of letters that match to the phoneme. Patterns for graphemes include: cvc, cvvc, cvc”e”. Grapho-phonemic awareness is the relationship between graphemes the symbols written to represent the sound phonemes make. Readers connect the spellings of words to their pronunciations. This view is different from traditional phoneme awareness because phonemic awareness refers to the smallest speech sounds. Phonemic awareness works for beginning readers when there is a one-to -one grapheme/phoneme relationship, however, there are countless words in which sounds are ambiguous phonetically.
Ehri’s research studied 1st and 2nd grader responses to spoken pseudowords. Students were shown letter prompts and the pseudoword was pronounced, students then saw the spellings of the pseudoword. Students were then shown misspellings of pseudowords.
This research discovered that when students saw correct spelling they remembered the pseudoword better than when they were shown no spellings. The visual representation produced a connection between spelling and pronunciations in their memory.
We moved along with our discussions to next cover vowels. There are 15 phonemes and 5 vowel letters in the English language. Vowels make sounds from different parts of the mouth. The position from which they are spoken affects the way the vowel sounds. Some vowels are high in the mouth, others are low, and some are in the middle. During this process, vowels are also pronounced for the front, middle, or back of the mouth. Combining these two positions together is what gives each vowel its sound. There are also diphthongs. A diphthong is a vowel that starts in one location in the mouth and ends in another when being pronounced in a word or as a sound unit. Some common diphthongs in the English language include: /aw/ as in “mouse”, /aw/ as in “bow”, /oy/ as in “boy”, /oy/ as in “soil”, /oo/ as in “look”, and /u/ as in “boot”. There are no diphthong patterns for the letter /i/ as in “why” or “like”. Upon completing this lesson, we practiced saying words and finding the vowel sound location in our mouths. As a follow up, we also discussed how different accents can cause different pronunciations of certain vowels.
Next, we studied propositions. A proposition is a meaning unit. This is how our brain breaks down a sentence for comprehension purposes. The basic break down in comprehension is to find a verb and a subject. This answers the question “Who does what?” These basic units are then built upon until the entire sentence is comprehended. Each segment influences the comprehension of the next segment to form a complete understanding of the sentence. After this study, we were timed while reading consistent and inconsistent passages to show that longer reading times were recorded on inconsistent passages when there is a longer filler time because of memory. Poor comprehension readers meet road blocks here when practicing reading. Propositions are idea units that combine more than one word in a schematic form.  Propositions allow the theorist to represent the meaning of sentences, independent of their syntactic structure. Just like letters combine to form words, words combine to form sentences. Surface level memory is the memory for the actual words and phrases of the text.  Surface memory is often short-lived. The propositional level of representation deals with the ideas in the text.  The microstructure of a text is the network of propositions that represents the meaning of the text.  One can think of it as a translation from the actual words used into an idea-level format. Microstructure and macrostructure together form the textbase. This is where sentences combine to create a larger picture – a paragraph or more complex idea or story. The situation model represents the information provided by the text, independent of the particular manner in which it was expressed in the text, and integrated with background information from the reader’s prior knowledge. Studies were performed to base findings of the Inconsistency Effect on skilled readers and on unskilled readers. After reading four passages that were in global condition, consistent; global condition, inconsistent; local condition, consistent; and local condition, inconsistent, the findings were as follows:

Skilled readers were able to understand and reflect on all four passages.
This is found true because skilled readers have the focued memory and comprehension skills desired to retain information about all types of passages.

Less skilled readers were able to understand and reflect both local passages, but neither of the global condition passages.
This is found true for the global condition, inconsistent passage because longer reading on inconsistent passages is required when there is longer filler time. This occurs because of long term memory use required in order to process the passages. The reading time should be longer because of the inconsistency.
It is also found true because in the global condition, consistent passage, because less skilled readers are having to process more information due to a 6 sentense filler before the target action takes place.
Compensatory mechanisms are a form of remediation or metacognition techniques that older readers use to comprehend text.  They can be used to overcome inefficient subcomponents such as decoding and limited resources such as attention and working memory.  Examples of compensatory mechanisms are: slowing the reading rate, looking back in text and rereading earlier portions or pausing to consolidate information in memory. In the article there are weak correlations between lower level reading processes and comprehension in older children and adults.  Students that are above the third grade level are usually efficient at decoding and can have efficient semantic memory access.  With these students decoding comes naturally to most of them and they do not have to focus on this.  Students that have inefficient subcomponents need interventions to help them improve students of upper levels into adulthood, often have a harder time grasping this concept. According to Walczyk, there is a stronger correlation only in situations such as testing.  In situations such as timed tests and there is pressure on students, their compensatory mechanisms are tested.  Students do not tend to use strategies for reading, but rather use strategies for test taking and because of this, their reading comprehension is not as good as it could be. In this article, it is stated that older readers and adults compensate for inefficient lower level processes, limited resources, or difficulty of text when reading under normal conditions. This is because it is harder for long time readers to adpat their own reading strategies to euipt themselves with newer better strategies of learning and comprehending.
We then studied fluency and its part in reading. Fluency is the capability to move through text with a grace and ease of flow. Fluency is built from three concepts. These concepts are: accuracy, automaticity (rate) and prosody. Prosody is the measure of duration of a pause in spoken language as a passage is read aloud. Accuracy is measured by number of words read correctly. This sis measured by reading selected passages. Errors in accuracy include substitutions, omissions, teacher help, inserting words, and self corrections. Automaticity is the rate of reading and is measured in words per minute (wpm). This is measured with word flashes. All of these together give a total score that reflects a student’s fluency.
Finally, we discussed and reviewed how these processes join together to form reading as a whole unit or activity. It all begins with reading processors. Reading processors are influenced by context processors, imagery, meaning processors, orthographical processors, and phonographical processors.  Context processors are affected by vocabulary knowledge. Meaning processors are affected by semantics, syntax, and language comprehension. Orthographical processors are affected by mental lexicon, lexicon bundles, writing, and reading. Phonographical processors are affected by decoding skills and phonemic awareness. Both Orthographical processors and meaning processors are affected by prosody. Both Phonographical processors and Orthographical processors are affected by automaticity and accuracy. Through out the process working memory is a key factor.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Methods of Teaching Reading

 Whole-word (look-away) instruction:
Typically, in this type of instruction, a student  is shown a flash card with a word on it, and the teacher pronounces it and asks the child to repeat. The teacher usually starts with small words and gradually expands to bigger words.  One argument to support whole word instruction, is the low reliablity of letter-to-phoneme mapping.  Using whole word instruction allows the teacher to pronounce the words and distinguish between the different vowels and sounds. It is argued that it promotes reading for meaning at an early stage of reading and that words have meaning and sounds do not.
 Phonics Instruction
Phonics starts with a limited set of correspondences between letters and speech sounds.  The letters are used to build different kinds of words. Gradually, more letters are added, and then consonant digraphs and clusters are introduced.  As different words are presented over and over, students also develop a sight vocaubulary during the early stages.   The letters are taught by the sounds they make and the students are taught to blend.  Phonics instruction teaches both alphabetic principle and the specific letter-phoneme correspondance.
 Meaning emphasis instruction
This type focuses on the language experiences of the student.  The student dictates short stories and is taught to read the words that he or she has dictated.  It empasizes on memorizing whole words.  This type of instruction relies heavily on the student’s experience with language. The basic means of motivation of the method is to make reading fun for the child.  It usually includes frequent oral reading by the teacher and the use of authentic literature, rather than decodable text.   This type of instruction has various tenets which are reading in a natural extension of language, explicit teaching of phonics treats reading as a technical exercise rather than a natural extension,and  explicit teaching of phonics is unneccessary for learning.
  Prescriptive vs. responsive teaching
Prescripitve teaching may vary in the amount of whole-class versus small group instruction and in the amount of assessment.  Teachers that are adhering to prescriptive teaching tend to plan their lessons around the review of letter sounds previously taught, the introduction of new letter sounds, practice blending sounds into words, practice reading decodable texts, teacher read alouds from children’s literature to teach vocabulary and comprehension strategies, and language arts.
Responsive Teaching: Responsive teaching is loosely based on the constructivist notion of scaffolding.  The responsive teacher responds to what the child is perceived  to need at the moment in the context of reading real books.  Responsive teaching is based on the belief that children inherit three cuing systems which are syntactic, semantic, and graphophonic knowledge.  The responsive teacher keeps a running record of reding miscues  to inform the next day’s alphabetic activities of making words and breaking words into constituent elements.  The most popular part of responsive teaching is guided reading which starts with whole class discussion of a reading selection elicit prior knowledge and introduce difficult vocabulary.  Leveled readers are also used in the small groups of guided reading.  Lower grades have also included a section of their schedule for phonics instruction.
 What is your best take on the best method to teach reading?
Between the whole word instruction, phonics instruction, and meaning emphasis, I believe that a combination of all types are needed to teach reading at a successful level. I believe this to be true because each student learns in a different way at a different speed. By using some of each strategy, I am reaching more of my students on their independent learning levels and meeting individual needs more closely.
 How would you characterize the reading instruction in your school? Why?
The reading instruction in my school is very balanced.  When I did my student teaching in first grade, there was the guided reading time and there was different activites for the reading story.  Also there was small group time when the phonics instruction came into play.  They called these "Flex Groups". That is when we taught word patterns, vowels and sounds, and blends.  I thought it was a great balance and a great way to teach reading. 

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Aquisition of Reading Fluency

How does Schreiber think Repeated Readings helps students compensate for the lack of prosodic features in print? Do you agree with his reasoning? Why or Why not?

Repeated Readings allow students to practice orally until mastery.  While reading, students hear the prosodic features as they read.  Students begin to recognize the type of syntactic phrasing that is necessary for comprehension.  Repeated readings provide students with the chance to progress in reading expression.  As students start to make better use of these cues in reading they can begin to use this while reading silently.  I agree with his reasoning because with repeated reading, students will become more familiar with prosodic cues and the reader will become a more fluent reader and this will lead to better comprehension of text.

Building Reading Fluency in a Disabled Middle School Reader

1. Who is Luke?
     Luke is an eighth grade boy who was tutored by a graduate student.  He lacks fluency and speed, had a history of Seizure Disorder, and was also diagnosed with having ADD.  He was a courteous and cooperative student, but struggled with reading and writing.  He was reading on a first grade level when entering the fifth grade and was placed in a reading program to help him make gains.  He made slow progress through his years at school and then started the instructional intervention in the summer of 2008.

2. Describe briefly the intervention used to addressed Luke’s problems in reading.
     Luke would listen to a chapter on tape and then stop the tape and reread the page. Luke would read the passage of text to his tutor who would make notes.The next part of the lesson was guided reading. Part three of the lesson would be repeated readings where Luke would read a 300 word passage from a book that he had read during guided reading.The last part of the lesson would be read aloud.

3. The main finding of this study is that the child improved his reading rate by 25 words per minute over the course of the intervention. This same gain eluded Luke’s isolated word reading rate (as measured with Word Recognition in Isolation–WRI). How do the authors explain this discrepancy?
     The main finding of this study is that the child improved his reading rate by 25 words per minute over the course of the intervention. This same gain eluded Luke’s isolated word reading rate (as measured with Word Recognition in Isolation–WRI). How do the authors explain this discrepancy? See their discussion on phrasing in the Commentary section.

4. Do you see any connections to our previous readings (e.g., Adams, 2004; Ehri & Wilce, 1979; Perfetti & Hogaboam, 1975, etc)?
     The connections I see are the building of word knowledge and word recognition from the younger years as being fundamental in the later years of learning. If this child had been helped with tutoring from day one of his struggles, he would be much farther along in his learning processes. These types of learning and tutoring strategies we have read about and learned about are crucial for many kids who struggle with reading and learning difficulties, whether they be because of a mental delay, physical delay, or learning disability.

Validating Craft Knowledge : An Empirical Examination of Elementary-Grade Students’ Performance on an Informal Reading Assessment

Research Question: For grades two through six, what are students' average scores (or score ranges) on the following assessments?
1. isolated word recognition (timed and untimed)
2. oral reading accuracy
3. reading comprehension (oral and silent)
4. reading rate (oral and silent)
5. spelling

At any given grade level, which measure (word-recognition-timed, oral reading accuracy, or spelling) is the best predictor of oral reading rate? we hypothesised that recognition-timed and spelling (both indicators of word representation quality) would be the best prdictors of reading rate.

Is there a strong relationship between oral and silent reading rate?  we hypothesised that a strong relationship at each grade, 2 through 6, given that both modes of reading share underlying language process.

Methods: 274 students in 8 elementary schools in western North Carolina: Two cohorts studied for 4 years
  • Cohort A: 137 students randomly selected from 2-grade population
  • Cohort B: 137 students randomly selected from 3-grade population
Findings: The best predictor of rate was using progression and studying word recognition flash accuracy and spelling in grades 2 through 6. In grades 2 through 5 word flash (score) drives rate. in grade six, automaticity drives rate. Only in grade six does accuracy come in as equal predictor of rate. The strongest predictor of reading rate depends on the grade level. All level off after fourth grade. The biggest jump  is noted between grades 2 and 3.

Implications for Instruction: Students still need to focus on decoding phonics and spelling patterns in the earlier grades to insure higher fluency rates later in elementary school. These can be taught using the word flash, word sorts, and other varying word games combined with spelling studies and word wall activities.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

The Inconsistency Effect by Reading Skill

Studies were performed to base findings of the Inconsistency Effect on skilled readers and on unskilled readers. After reading four passages that were in global condition, consistent; global condition, inconsistent; local condition, consistent; and local condition, inconsistent, the findings were as follows:

Skilled readers were able to understand and reflect on all four passages.
This is found true because skilled readers have the focued memory and comprehension skills desired to retain information about all types of passages.

Less skilled readers were able to understand and reflect both local passages, but neither of the global condition passages.
This is found true for the global condition, inconsistent passage because longer reading on inconsistent passages is required when there is longer filler time. This occurs because of long term memory use required in order to process the passages. The reading time should be longer because of the inconsistency.
It is also found true because in the global condition, consistent passage, because less skilled readers are having to process more information due to a 6 sentense filler before the target action takes place.

Friday, October 8, 2010

Compensatory Encoding Theory

    (Walczyk)
     Compensatory mechanisms are a form of remediation or metacognition techniques that older readers use to comprehend text.  They can be used to overcome inefficient subcomponents such as decoding and limited resources such as attention and working memory.  Examples of compensatory mechanisms are: slowing the reading rate, looking back in text and rereading earlier portions or pausing to consolidate information in memory.
     In the article there are weak correlations between lower level reading processes and comprehension in older children and adults.  Students that are above the third grade level are usually efficient at decoding and can have efficient semantic memory access.  With these students decoding comes naturally to most of them and they do not have to focus on this.  Students that have inefficient subcomponents need interventions to help them improve. students of upper levels into adulthood, often have a harder time grasping this concept.
     According to Walczyk, there is a stronger correlation only in situations such as testing.  In situations such as timed tests and there is pressure on students, their compensatory mechanisms are tested.  Students do not tend to use strategies for reading, but rather use strategies for test taking and because of this, their reading comprehension is not as good as it could be.     
     In this article, it is stated that older readers and adults compensate for inefficient lower level processes, limited resources, or difficulty of text when reading under normal conditions. This is because it is harder for long time readers to adpat their own reading strategies to euipt themselves with newer better strategies of learning and comprehending.

Construction-Integration Model of Text Comprehension

What is proposition?

Propositions are idea units that combine more than one word in a schematic form.  Propositions allow the theorist to represent the meaning of sentences, independent of their syntactic structure. Just like letters combine to form words, words combine to form sentences.

How many types of text representation are there?

Surface level memory is the memory for the actual words and phrases of the text.  Surface memory is often short-lived. The propositional level of representation deals with the ideas in the text.  The microstructure of a text is the network of propositions that represents the meaning of the text.  One can think of it as a translation from the actual words used into an idea-level format. Microstructure and macrostructure together form the textbase. This is where sentences combine to create a larger picture – a paragraph or more complex idea or story. The situation model represents the information provided by the text, independent of the particular manner in which it was expressed in the text, and integrated with background information from the reader’s prior knowledge.

What do the terms construction and integration refer to?

The Construction-Integration model generates several meanings in parallel and later, sorts out which construction is the right one.  Construction refers to the process of sorting out meanings that do not fit within the context and strengthens other meanings that do fit.  In the integration process, the correct proposition will win out because it is connected to prior knowledge.  The CI model uses a bottom-up construction phase where contradictory assumptions are explored and then ruled out during the integration phase.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

The Mnemonic Power of Print: The contribution of Word Spellings for Vocabulary Learning and Instruction

Research Question: Could new vocabulary items be read by sight?

Methods:Low frequency nouns were taught to second graders and fifth graders. Students rehearsed the pronounciations and meanings of the words over several trials. During the initial study trial words were introduced. All of the following trials tested their knowledge of the words. After each recall, correct responses were provided. Meanings were taught through pictures, definitions and multiple sentences. This clarified their meanings and use. Trials continued until students had met a set number of trials. In the treatment setting, student were taught with the word visable, in the control, there were no words visable.

Findings: In second graders, it was easier for students to recall meanings of words than pronounciations of words. Recall was superior when spellings were seen. This worked for the recall of meanings as well as the recall of pronounciations. 

Instructional Implications: When teaching new vocabulary, it is both crucial and beneficial to the student's learning to provide the spelling and visual of each vocabulary word in the lesson.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Daneman, M. & Carpenter, P. (1980). Individual differences in working memory and reading. Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 19, 450-466.

Research Question: What is the relationship between reading comprehension and working memory?
Methods: Twenty undergraduate students were given three tests including a reading span test to measure their working memory span, a traditional word span test, and a reading comprehension test that asked questions about facts and pronominal references.  After reading the passage the subjects were asked two questions – one was about a fact in the passage and another was about the pronoun in the last sentence and its antecedent mentioned earlier in the passage.  The distance between the pronoun and the antecedent varied among passages. 
Findings: The traditional short term memory tests of digit and word span tasks do not tax the processing component of the working memory test. Studies using such measures do not find strong correlations with reading. If a short memory test was used with heavier demands on processing, poor readers would have less attention left to retain information. The reading span test was correlated significantly .90 with the pronominal reference test and .72 with the fact retrieval task. Its correlation with the global assessment reading comprehension (Verbal SAT) was also significant: r = .59. The word span task correlated non-significantly only .33, .37, and .35 with the reading tests respectively.
The results indicate that the reading span task is related to working memory capacity.
Instructional Implications: The good reader has more functional working memory capacity available for the demands of chunking. He is more likely to have more concepts and relations from preceding parts of the text still active in working memory. The good reader's chunks should be richer, and more coherent, and contain different information.
 

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Working Memory

There are three main parts to Bladdely’s model of working memory..  The three main parts are the central executive, phonological loop, and the visuo-spatial sketchpad.
The central executive is a system responsible for the control and regulation of cognitive processes. The phonological loop deals with sound or phonological information. The visuo-spatial sketchpad holds information about what we see. It is used in the temporary storage and retrieval of spatial and visual information. The episodic buffer is the third part, it links information across domains to form integrated units of visual, spatial, and verbal information with time sequencing. The episodic buffer also forms links to long-term memory.
It amazes me how memory works not only for intellectual memorizations and learning techniques, but for everyday recall and emotional memories as well....

Vocabulary

Why is vocabulary instruction important to reading comprehension? According to the Joshi article, vocabulary is a means for beinning the understanding of comprehension.  One study of 3rd graders showed that most students had mastered decoding skills and could comprehend grade level materials.  But it has been noted that once they reach middle grades, while their decoding skills remained good, poor vocabulary interfered with comprehension on these grade levels.  Some students do not have a large source of vocabulary or are not taught vocabulary that enriches their understanding while reading. According to the Adams article, direct vocabulary instruction has resulted in an increase in word knowledge and reading comprehension in all students that were studied.

What is the Matthew Effect?
The Matthew Effect states that  poor readers tend to read easier materials and fewer books than good readers do.  A poor reader’s vocabulary grows at a slower rate than students with a larger vocabulary because the books that they are being assigned have poorer quality vocabulary in them.  Students with a larger vocabulary read more and better comprehend the material they read.  A student’s vocabulary knowledge is affected by the amount of words they are exposed to.  Children with a lower vocabulary tend to define words in terms of the context that they were read in, while children with a larger vocabulary were able to define words in more general terms and show examples of the word meanings.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Ehri and Goodman

1- How does Ehri’s view of grapho-phoneme awareness differ from the traditional notion of phoneme awareness. Briefly discuss the research evidence that she draws on in postulating grapho-phonemic awareness.

Grapho-phonemic awareness is the relationship between graphemes the symbols written to represent the sound phonemes make. Readers connect the spellings of words to their pronunciations. This view is different from traditional phoneme awareness because phonemic awareness refers to the smallest speech sounds. Phonemic awareness works for beginning readers when there is a one-to -one grapheme/phoneme relationship, however, there are countless words in which sounds are ambiguous phonetically.
Ehri’s research studied 1st and 2nd grader responses to spoken pseudowords. Students were shown letter prompts and the pseudoword was pronounced, students then saw the spellings of the pseudoword. Students were then shown misspellings of pseudowords.
This research discovered that when students saw correct spelling they remembered the pseudoword better than when they were shown no spellings. The visual representation produced a connection between spelling and pronunciations in their memory.

2- Describe briefly the reading process that Goodman suggests.
Goodman suggests during oral reading the reader is performing two tasks at the same time.; produce oral language determined by graphic input and make sense of what he is reading. He states proficient readers decode from the graphic stimulus and then encode from the deep structure. He feels readers are making their best attempts at reading text by utilizing graphic input as well as syntactic and sematic information. Readers then predict and anticipate using this information. Readers are sampling just enough text to confirm their guess of what is coming.
How would Adams respond to Goodman’s model of reading?
Adam’s model represents reading as a simultaneous process, all processors are working together. Adams says skilled readers rarely think about indivdual letters or words. While Goodman’s model, like Adams, involves the reader doing several things at one time, Goodman differs from Adams as he states eye movement does not work in reading.

Cunningham, A. &Stanovich, K. (1993). Children's literacy environments and early word recognition subskills. Reading and Writing: An Interdiciplinary Journal , 5, 193-204

Cunningham and Stanovich’s research enhances Cassar’s by trying to separate phonological and orthographic processing skills in word recognition during the very earliest stages of reading acquisition.  They also asked if print exposure predicted variance in orthographic knowledge.
Using several different measures, including the Stanford Achievement Test, phoneme deletion, phoneme transpostion, experimental spelling tasks, letter-string choice tasks, and Title Recongition Test, Cunningham and Stanovich proved there was a 40% correlation between exposure to print and orthographic knowledge for early readers.
Stanovich and Cunningham confirm that exposure to print will build orthographic conventions.  Students should read high interest, easy material to help build their processing skills.

Cassar, M. & Treiman, R. (1997). The beinnings of orthographic knowledge: Children’s knowledge of double letters in words. Journal of Educational Psychology, 89, 4, 631-644.

Cassar and Treiman conducted a research study on the knowledge of double letters in English. The study showed students from kindergarten through college. Their interest in the study was to find out how orthographic knowledge plays a role in the letter choices of young children’s created spelling.
Does the knowledge that young children have about the postitions in which double letters occur and about which letters are doubled help in their invented spelling, or is this type of orthographic understanding a late addition to the knowledge base?
The dependent variable was the accuracy when identifying if a word is real or not based on the position of the consonant or letters.
The independent variables were the position of the "doublet" or orthographic convention and the grade level of the student.
The methods for the experiments were based on whether students were shown nonwords with double consonants. Depending on the position of the consonants, the students were asked if the nonword could be an English word, not if it could be a word from another language.
The other experiment studied phonological environment, postiton, and identity of doubled consonants. The students were shown a nonword and given the pronunciation. They were then to choose the best spelling of the word based on what they had heard, not seen.
There are two categories of nonword pairs. The first group had a short vowel and the second had a long vowel. The correct answer was the nonword spelling that correleated to the correct pronunciation.
Results concluded that Kindergarteners were able to identify the correct spelling of the nonwords when the "doublet" was in the correct place. This shows that the students had generalized that words do not begin with "doublets" or contain double consonants that they are not familiar with, for example, kk or bb. As early as first grade, the students were able to identify the correct position of "doublets" in words.
Both sets of subjects conditions tended to choose single consonant spellings more often than the doublets, resulting in more long-vowel words than short-vowel words' spellings being chosen correctly.
This study shows us that with exposure to print, young children are able to generalize correct spellings. Even when students are unable to read independently, they are forming a knowledge of how letters work together and are ordered to form words. Exposing students to print is the key in the early grades in order to develop this understanding from the beginning.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Lenses on Reading

Gough’s Model:

Gough’s model became known as the “bottoms up” model. This also is known as the information processing model. It is made up of different stages. The focuses are on explaining unobservable cognitive processes during the reading process by the subject. The issue of validity with this model lies in that struggling readers can get stuck during the scanner stage due to the lack of vocabulary or word recognition. This model is similar to Adams’ model in that Gough believes that there are several stages and processes in the reading process. Gough’s model is different from Adams’ in that it works together more.

Automatic Information Processing Model:

This model contains five major parts. They are: the visual memory, phonological memory, episodic memory, semantic memory, and attention. In this model, it is believed that with exposure and practice, the visual features become perceived as a single unit. This model shows the cognitive processing perspective. Its main focus is on explaining underlying, unobservable, cognitive processes. This model is like Adams’ model because there are major stages in each of the models.

Interactive Model:

This model begins with visual text input, but the processors use visual information simultaneously. By processing syntactic, semantic, orthographic, and lexical information at the same time, both higher level and lower level processes can interact. The Interactive Information Processing Model is most similar to Adams’s model because it involves multiple processes occurring simultaneously. According to both, reading is not a linear process, but an interactive one involving both high and lower level processes. This model is considered interactive instead of the above mentioned “bottom-up.”

Larson Article

A huge debate in the reading research world is which should be the unit of processing? According to Larson, it is the letter, not the word that should be the focus. Larson says that letter formation is key to recognizing words.


The parallel letter recognition model best explains the Word Superiority Effect, thus it is the best explanation for how letters are processed. This is based on the findings during eye movement studies that proved that words are processed as whole units rather than letter by letter.

Word-shape model reading instruction leaves many things to stake. If students are only taught to read using the word-shape model of words, they are more likely to make errors when similar spelled words are presented. They should be taught using letter-sound models, word families (rhymes), and spelling patterns (cvc, cvce, etc.). By teaching students how words work, not just how they look, we will be teaching them to be life long readers capable of new terms and text types.

If a student is struggling to read, then teaching eye movements is not going to do anything to help their reading skills. It would more than likely confuse them further and cause a frustration that would likely turn them off to reading in the long run.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Perfetti & Hogaboam Research Summary

Perfetti, C. and Hogaboam, T. (1975). Relationship between single word decoding and reading comprehension skill. Journal of Educational Psychology, 67, 4, 461-469.



Research Question: How do higher skilled and lower skilled readers compare on the decoding of words that they know the meanings of and how do they compare on the decoding of words that they do not know the meanings of?

Methods: There were four independent variables(IV) in this study: student grade level, skilled and unskilled readers, word type – high frequency, low frequency, and pseudowords (non-words). The dependent variable (DV) in the study was the vocalization of words and non-words. Words were shown in random order by a projector onto a screen. When the word was flashed onto the screen a timer would start when the student began to vocalize their response and then the word would disappear. The timer would stop when the student stopped speaking. Students were encouraged to respond quickly. After the student read the words, a multiple-choice test was administered to test knowledge of the words in a set. This multiple-choice test gave researchers information about a student’s word knowledge.

Findings: The experiment showed researchers that higher skilled readers were able to read all types of words and non-words quicker than lower skilled readers. High frequency words were recognized in the least amount of time, followed next by lower frequency words, and finally by pseudowords (non-words), which had the longest response time by either set of students.

Friday, August 27, 2010

About Me

My name is Sarah Hutson. I am married and have two children, a boy and a girl. My son's name is Lane and he is in third grade this year. My daughter's name is Charley Grace and she just began Kindergarten. My husband works full time as a shipping clerk at AES in Mount Airy and is the coach of the company's softball team. Lane is a cub scout and plays basketball, baseball, and football. He is also getting ready to begin banjo lessons this fall. Charley Grace has been dancing for 3 years. She has taken ballet, jazz, lyrical, and clogging. She also cheers for Dobson Eagle Football team. They all keep me pretty busy.
I hold an NC teaching license and graduated from ASU in 2009. I have not been able to land a teaching job as of yet, so currently I am working towards my Masters in Reading and volunteering in the Title One program at my children's elementary school.
In my spare time, I love to read, take pictures, and spend time with my family and pets. I have three dogs, 2 chihuahuas and a Jack Russell Terrier. I also have a calico cat named LuLu.

8-27-2010

Hey...I am disappointed that this is now a weekend class....however, I will deal with it =)

Sarah Hutson