Landi Nicole, Kleinman Daniel, Agrawal Vishakha, Ashton Grace, Coyne-Green Aviva, Roberts Pat, Blair Nancy, Russell Jay, Stutzman Annie, Scorrano Danielle, Frazier Najah, Pugh Kenneth R, Hoeft Fumiko
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, USA and Haskins Laboratories, New Haven, CT, USA.
Haskins Laboratories, New Haven, CT, USA.
J Res Read. 2022 Aug;45(3):367-384. doi: 10.1111/1467-9817.12392. Epub 2022 Apr 5.
Educational neuroscience approaches have helped to elucidate the brain basis of Reading Disability (RD) and of reading intervention response; however, there is often limited translation of this knowledge to the broader scientific and educational communities. Moreover, this work is traditionally lab-based, and thus the underlying theories and research questions are siloed from classroom practices. With growing awareness of the neurobiological origins of RD and increasing popularity of putative "brain-based" approaches in clinics and classrooms, it is imperative that we create more direct and bidirectional communication between scientists and practitioners. Such direct collaborations can help dispel neuromyths, and lead to increased understanding of the promises and pitfalls of neuroscience approaches. Moreover, direct partnerships between researchers and practitioners can lead to greater ecological validity in study designs to improve upon the translational potential of findings. To this end, we have forged collaborative partnerships, and built cognitive neuroscience laboratories within independent reading disabilities schools. This approach affords frequent and ecologically valid neurobiological assessment as children's reading improves in response to intervention. It also permits the creation of dynamic models of leading and lagging relationships of students' learning, and identification of individual-level predictors of intervention response. The partnerships also provide in-depth knowledge of student characteristics and classroom practices, which, when combined with the data we acquire, may facilitate optimization of instructional approaches. In this commentary, we discuss the creation of our partnerships, the scientific problem we are addressing (variable response to reading intervention), and the epistemological significance of researcher-practitioner bi-directional learning.
教育神经科学方法有助于阐明阅读障碍(RD)和阅读干预反应的大脑基础;然而,这些知识向更广泛的科学和教育界的转化往往有限。此外,这项工作传统上基于实验室,因此其基础理论和研究问题与课堂实践相脱节。随着对RD神经生物学起源的认识不断提高,以及在临床和课堂上所谓“基于大脑”方法的日益流行,我们必须在科学家和从业者之间建立更直接的双向沟通。这种直接合作有助于消除神经科学误区,并增进对神经科学方法的前景和陷阱的理解。此外,研究人员和从业者之间的直接合作可以提高研究设计的生态效度,以增强研究结果的转化潜力。为此,我们建立了合作关系,并在独立的阅读障碍学校内设立了认知神经科学实验室。随着儿童阅读能力因干预而提高,这种方法提供了频繁且具有生态效度的神经生物学评估。它还允许创建学生学习领先和滞后关系的动态模型,并识别干预反应的个体水平预测因素。这些合作关系还提供了关于学生特征和课堂实践的深入知识,将这些知识与我们获取的数据相结合,可能有助于优化教学方法。在这篇评论中,我们讨论了合作关系的建立、我们正在解决的科学问题(对阅读干预的可变反应)以及研究者与从业者双向学习的认识论意义。