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A01=Louise Spear-swerling
A01=Robert Sternberg
academic identification of learning disabilities
acquisition
Alphabetic Insight
Author_Louise Spear-swerling
Author_Robert Sternberg
Automatic Word Recognition
Automatic Word Recognition Skills
Category=JMR
Category=JNA
Category=JNSC
Category=JNSG
Code Emphasis Approach
Code Emphasis Program
cognitive psychology
Compensatory Readers
Delayed Readers
developmental reading disorders
disability
early reading strategies
educational assessment
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Extrinsic Perspective
garden
Garden Variety Poor Reader
Intrinsic Perspective
IQ Achievement Discrepancy
LD Field
Listening Comprehension Activities
literacy intervention
Louise Spear-Swerling
Nonalphabetic Readers
Phonological Awareness
Phonological Awareness Training
Phonological Processing Skills
poor
Poor Readers
reader
reading
Reading Acquisition
Reading Disability
Reading Recovery
recognition
Robert J. Sternberg
skills
special education research
variety
Weak Phonological Skills
word
Word Recognition
Word Recognition Deficits
Word Recognition Skills

Product details

  • ISBN 9780813387574
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Jan 1997
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The identification of poor readers as "learning disabled" can be the first of many steps toward consigning students to a lifetime of reading failure. The very label that is meant to help children often becomes a burden that works against effective learning throughout their schooling. In this book, the authors identify the dangers of labeling children as reading or learning disabled, contending that a "reading disability" is not a unitary phenomenon. In order to diagnose and help children, educators and parents need to understand the multiple sources of reading difficulty before they can choose appropriate means to correct it. Drawing on recent research in cognitive psychology, the authors present a new theoretical model of reading disability that integrates a wide variety of findings across age and grade spans. Laid out in terms that are readily comprehensible to parents and practitioners, the model outlines the phases that are characteristic of the path to proficient reading, then describes four ways in which disabled readers may stray from this path. The key to the authors' work lies in the fact that youngsters who stray from the path of typical reading acquisition often are not distinguishable from other children who are classified as "poor readers" rather than as "learning disabled." This model is an especially useful one for practitioners because it both provides a broader view of reading disability than have many previous models and shows how reading disability relates to typical reading acquisition. Using illustrative case studies, the authors describe the four patterns of reading disability, explain how to properly assess them, and suggest ways to conquer them.
Louise Spear-Swerling is associate professor of special education at Southern Connecticut State University. Robert J. Sternberg is IBM Professor of Psychology and Education at Yale University. Robert J. Sternberg is IBM Professor of Psychology and Education at Yale University.