McCartney Elspeth, Boyle James, Ellis Sue
School of Psychological Sciences and Health, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK.
Int J Lang Commun Disord. 2015 Jan-Feb;50(1):129-35. doi: 10.1111/1460-6984.12124. Epub 2014 Sep 2.
Some children in areas of social deprivation in Scotland have lower reading attainment than neighbouring children in less deprived areas, and some of these also have lower spoken language comprehension skills than expected by assessment norms. There is a need to develop effective reading comprehension interventions that fit easily into the school curriculum and can benefit all pupils. A feasibility study of reading comprehension strategies with existing evidence of efficacy was undertaken in three mainstream primary schools within an area of social deprivation in west central Scotland, to decide whether further investigation of this intervention was warranted.
Aims were to measure comprehension of spoken language and reading via standardised assessments towards the beginning of the school year (T1) in mainstream primary school classrooms within an area of social deprivation; to have teachers introduce previously-validated text comprehension strategies, and to measure change in reading comprehension outcome measures towards the end of the year (T2).
METHODS & PROCEDURES: A pre- and post-intervention cohort design was used. Reading comprehension strategies were introduced to staff in participating schools and used throughout the school year as part of on-going reading instruction. Spoken language comprehension was measured by TROG-2 at T1, and reading progress by score changes from T1 to T2 on the WIAT-II(UK) -T reading comprehension scale.
OUTCOMES & RESULTS: Forty-seven pupils in five classes in three primary schools took part: 38% had TROG-2 scores below the 10(th) centile. As a group, children made good reading comprehension progress, with a medium effect size of 0.46. Children with TROG-2 scores below the 10(th) centile had lower mean reading scores than others at T1 and T2, although with considerable overlap. However, TROG-2 did not make a unique contribution to reading progress: children below the 10(th) centile made as much progress as other children. The intervention was welcomed by schools, and the measure of reading comprehension proved responsive to change.
The outcomes suggest the reading intervention may be effective for children with and without spoken language comprehension difficulties, and warrants further investigation in larger, controlled, studies.
在苏格兰社会贫困地区,一些儿童的阅读成绩低于周边贫困程度较低地区的儿童,其中一些儿童的口语理解能力也低于评估标准预期。有必要开发易于融入学校课程且能使所有学生受益的有效阅读理解干预措施。在苏格兰中西部一个社会贫困地区的三所主流小学,对具有现有疗效证据的阅读理解策略进行了可行性研究,以确定是否有必要对这种干预措施进行进一步调查。
目的是在社会贫困地区的主流小学课堂上,在学年开始时(T1)通过标准化评估来测量口语理解和阅读能力;让教师引入先前验证过的文本理解策略,并在学年结束时(T2)测量阅读理解结果指标的变化。
采用干预前后队列设计。向参与学校的工作人员介绍阅读理解策略,并在整个学年作为持续阅读教学的一部分使用。在T1时通过TROG - 2测量口语理解能力,通过WIAT - II(英国)-T阅读理解量表上从T1到T2的分数变化测量阅读进展。
三所小学五个班级的47名学生参与:38%的学生TROG - 2分数低于第10百分位。总体而言,孩子们在阅读理解方面取得了良好进展,中等效应量为0.46。TROG - 2分数低于第10百分位的孩子在T1和T2时的平均阅读分数低于其他孩子,尽管有相当大的重叠。然而,TROG - 2对阅读进展没有独特贡献:低于第10百分位的孩子与其他孩子取得的进步一样多。该干预措施受到学校欢迎,阅读理解测量结果证明对变化有反应。
结果表明,阅读干预措施可能对有或没有口语理解困难的儿童都有效,值得在更大规模的对照研究中进一步调查。