Today’s session
1. Memo 2 debrief2. Fluency presentation3. Understanding fluency4. Break5. Mind mapping
Last week…
• We still know that a phonological deficit is the core basis for dyslexia
• We know that there must be a biological reason for this
• We know that researchers have not found a convincing causal pathway yet so…
• If someone tries to convince us otherwise, we need to be wary
Last week…
• Biology DOES have the potential to:
- help with individualizing interventions- help understand the developmental picture
Fluency?
Wolf & Katzir-Cohen
a) What do we mean by fluency?b) What is the development of its
component structure?c) How does it relate to reading
difficulty subtypes?d) What does it mean for intervention?
What is fluency?
Bursuck & Damer, Chp. 5.,
“Reading fluency is the ability to read text accurately, quickly and with expression.”
What is fluency?
Bursuck & Damer, Chp. 5.,
“Reading fluency is the ability to read text accurately, quickly and with expression.”
What is fluency?
Bursuck & Damer, Chp. 5.,
“Reading fluency is the ability to read text accurately, quickly and with expression.”
Quickly…
• Berninger, Abbott, Billingsley & NagyFluency is:a) characteristics of stimulus input e.g. (rate and persistence of visual/auditory signal)b) efficiency and automaticity of internal processes (phonological, orthographic and morphological systems)c) coordination of responses by executive function systems
What is fluency?
Bursuck & Damer, Chp. 5.,
“Reading fluency is the ability to read text accurately, quickly and with expression.”
Fluency?
Wolf & Katzir-Cohen
a) What do we mean by fluency?b) What is the development of its
component structure?c) How does it relate to reading
difficulty subtypes?d) What does it mean for intervention?
Development of Fluency
• Fluency depends on development of phonological, orthographic, semantic and morphological systems
AND LINKAGES BETWEEN THESE
Fluency?
Wolf & Katzir-Cohen
a) What do we mean by fluency?b) What is the development of its
component structure?c) How does it relate to reading
difficulty subtypes?d) What does it mean for intervention?
Subtypes?
The Double Deficit Hypothesis
Basic premise – for some children with earlyIdentifiable, specific, reading difficulties,
phonology is not the problem
Seen through RAN
RAN
Wolf, Bowers and Biddle (2000), “ Naming speed is conceptualized as a complex ensemble of attentional, perceptual, conceptual, memory, phonological, semantic and motoric subprocesses that places heavy emphasis on precise timing requirements within each component and across all components” (p.395)
• RAN does predict early reading progress, alongside phonological awareness
• Assumption is that these individuals will also struggle later with fluency
RAN
Wolf, Bowers and Biddle (2000), “ Naming speed is conceptualized as a complex ensemble of attentional, perceptual, conceptual, memory, phonological, semantic and motoric subprocesses that places heavy emphasis on precise timing requirements within each component and across all components” (p.395)
• RAN does predict early reading progress, alongside phonological awareness
• Assumption is that these individuals will also struggle later with fluency
Vukovic and Siegel, 2006
The Double Deficit Hypothesis: A Comprehensive Analysis of the Evidence
• Unclear who the children with just slow naming speed are.
• Need for more intervention studies: e.g. 2 groups matched in phonemic awareness skills but differing in RAN – does poor RAN affect responsiveness to intervention? (Vukovic & Siegel, 2006)
• Does early RAN difficulty definitely mean later fluency difficulties?
JOURNAL OF LEARNING DISABILITIES, 39,2006, PAGES 25–47
Fluency?
Wolf & Katzir-Cohen
a) What do we mean by fluency?b) What is the development of its
component structure?c) How does it relate to reading
difficulty subtypes?d) What does it mean for intervention?
Takeaway
• More developmental conceptualization of fluency is good e.g. RAVE-O
• There is a lot that still requires research evidence