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Defining and Addressing Dyslexia in Young Children
Salli Forbes, Director Debra Rich, Assistant Director Jacobson Center for Comprehensive Literacy
University of Northern Iowa
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Session Goal:
• Framing the issues around the term ‘dyslexia’
• Identifying the definitions and research findings about dyslexia from different disciplines
• Looking to the future with caveats and a call for future research
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3 u“…children are born ‘wired’ for language, but print is an optional accessory that must be painstakingly bolted on.” (Pinker, 1997 in Norton & Wolf, 2012)
u“…each child must develop reading skills using brain areas that have developed for other purposes, such as language, vision, and attention. (Norton & Wolf, 2012, p. 429)
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Different disciplines view dyslexia through different lenses.
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Reasons for Differences Between Disciplines
uDeveloped understandings separately uHave unique research methodologies uHave unique terminology and definitions
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Adolph Kussmaul (1878)
Word Blindness Vortblindheit
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Rudolf Berlin (1887)
Dyslexia Eine besondere Art der Wortblindheit (Dyslexie)
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Dr. W. Pringle Morgan (1896)
A case of congenital word blindness British Medical Journal
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Dr. Samuel T. Orton (1925)
Strephosymbolia
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Recent History from the Fields of Literacy and Special Education
• Stanovich (1986) – “Matthew Effects” Reciprocal causation
• Phonological awareness and early reading acquisition (limited)
• Ease/speed of word recognition and comprehension
• Reading ability and vocabulary knowledge • Vocabulary knowledge and comprehension • Reading skill level and volume of reading • Reading skill level and effective instruction
11 Recent History from the Fields of Literacy and Special Education
• Clay (1987) - Learning to be learning disabled • Reading disability for most - not an organic cause • Reading disability for most - instructional cause • Effective instruction significantly reduces the number
of children with reading disability • Identification using IQ-achievement discrepancy not
valid
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Recent History from the Fields of Literacy and Special Education
• Stanovich (1991)– Challenge to discrepancy definition for identification
• Vellutino (1996) – Identification through response to instruction
13 Cognitive/Medical PerspectiveDefinition of Dyslexia
“Dyslexia is a specific learning disability that is neurobiological in origin. It is characterized by difficulties with accurate and/or fluent word recognition and by poor spelling and decoding abilities. These difficulties typically result from a deficit in the phonological component of language that is often unexpected in relation to other cognitive abilities and the provision of effective classroom instruction.” p.2 Lyon, G.R., Shaywitz, S.E., & Shaywitz, B.A. (2003). Defining dyslexia, comorbidity, teachers’ knowledge of language and reading. Annals of Dyslexia, 53, 1-15.
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Phonological Processing (Bradley & Bryant, 1978; Lieberman, et al 1989; Ramus, 2003; Snowling, Goulandris & Defty, 1996; Wagner & Torgesen, 1987)
u Refers to the child’s ability to use the sound structure of oral language in service of processing oral and written language
u Debate: Is it language-specific or sound-general?
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Gabrieli, J. (2009). Dyslexia: A new synergy between education and cognitive neuroscience. Science, 325, 280-283.
fMRI Imaging Activations for Phonological ProcessingTasks
Rhyme LettersPhonological
Processing
Match LettersNon-phonological
Task
Match LinesNon-letter Baseline
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T D P P
19DTI Imaging Activations for Phonological Processing
Gabrieli, J. (2009). Dyslexia: A new synergy between education and cognitive neuroscience. Science, 325, 280-283.
Rapid Automatized Naming (RAN) (Ackerman & Dykman, 1993; Badian, 1995; Bowers, Steffy & Tate, 1988; Katzir, Kim, Wolf, Morris, & Lovett, 2008; Scarborough, 1998)
uSpeed with which a series of familiar stimuli can be named aloud, reflecting efficient visual-verbal connections
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Norton, E., & Wolf, M. (2012). Rapid automatized naming (RAN) and reading fluency: implications for understanding and treatment of reading disabilities. Annual Review of Psychology 63, 427-52.
Double-Deficit Hypothesis (Wolf & Bowers, 1999)
u Deficits in phonologic or naming-speed processes can impeded reading acquisition
u Naming speed cannot be subsumed under phonology
u Phonological and naming-speed processes make unique contributions to reading
21 22Double-Deficit Hypothesis
Norton, E., Black, J., Stanley, L., Tanaka, H., Gabrieli, J., Sawyer, C., & Hoeft, F. (2014). Functional neuroanatomical evidence for the double-deficit hypothesis of developmental dyslexia. Neuropsychologia, 61, 235-246.
Additional Theories
u Rapid auditory processing theory (Tallal, 1980, 2000; Tallal et al, 1993)
u General impairment in the ability to adequately process brief sounds
u Not generally supported
u Cerebellar Deficit Model (Nicolson and Fawcett, 1990; Nicolson et al, 2001) u Deficit in motor system related to task automaticity u Not consistently supported
23Additional Theories
u Magnocellular Theory (Galaburda et al, 1994; Livingstone et al, 1991; Stein, 2003:
Stein and Walsh, 1997)
u Unifying theory of visual, auditory, and cerebellar theories u Assumes sensory and motor deficits in dyslexia u Research does not support this model
u Genetic Theories
u Rare chromosomal translocations have been identified in familial studies
u Three genes associated with white matter volume have been identified, which may influence reading ability
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Is the spotlight of attention shining on the right issues?
26Theoretical Deficit Frameworks for Dyslexia
Cerebellar AnchoringMagnocellular
Motor Visual AuditoryPerceptual
LearningProcessing
Speed?
Rhythmic Processing
Rapid Temporal Processing
Naming SpeedPhonology
Phonological Memory
Phonological Awareness
Rapid Naming
Single word Reading Difficulty
Level: Neuro
Level: Cognitive
Level: Behavioral
Can Dyslexia be Treated?
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Instructional Approaches
Fast ForwardChildren
fMRI studies have shown that left- hemisphere brain regions that are typically under activated in dyslexia exhibit a gain in activation after effective intervention
Lindamood BellAdults
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There is no behavioral research to demonstrate increased reading achievement of children with Dyslexia with these or any other educational programs
29 30Hyper activation in the left and right prefrontal cortex
Increases in age in dyslexic children, not in typically reading children
Hoeft, F., McCandliss, B., Black, J., Gantman, A., Zakerani, N, Hulme, C, Lyytinen, H., Whitfield-Gabrieli, S., Glover, G., Reiss, A., & Gabrieli, J. (2011), Neural systems predicting long-term outcome in dyslexia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, 1081)), 361-366.
Promising Research: The Compensation Brain
Recommendations
u Dyslexic children who overcome their reading difficulties somehow bypass regions normally used for reading
u This finding encourages consideration of intervention approaches that capitalize on alternative reading strategies in addition to current interventions that build on typical reading instruction
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Hoeft, F., McCandliss, B., Black, J., Gantman, A., Zakerani, N, Hulme, C, Lyytinen, H., Whitfield-Gabrieli, S., Glover, G., Reiss, A., & Gabrieli, J. (2011), Neural systems predicting long-term outcome in dyslexia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, 1081)), 361-366.
Manuel Casanova, professor of psychiatry at the University of Louisville, says the study’s most important contribution is revealing that the behavioral and intelligence measures commonly used to evaluate a dyslexic child’s chances of improvement — such as IQ tests and standardized reading tests — are not reliable. “The conventional wisdom until now has been behavioral measurements,” says Casanova. “I am blown away by the fact that IQ is not predictive of the ability to improve.”
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Areas for further research What personalized interventions will improve the reading achievement of individual children with dyslexia?
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Compensation? Normalization?
Caveats for Moving Forward:
• Each discipline has somewhat unique research methodologies
• Each discipline has unique terminology and definitions - dyslexia, reading disability, learning disability
• Each discipline has different methods of identification of people with dyslexia—fMRI, DTI & EEG, CTOPP & RAN, DSM-5, RtI
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Different disciplines view dyslexia through different lenses.
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“”
There is no single test and no absolute criteria for diagnosing dyslexia.
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(Norton & Wolf, 2012, p. 430)
In the 2013 edition of the DSM-5 from the American Psychiatric Association, dyslexia is listed in the category of ‘specific learning disorder’.
The DSM-5 Neurodevelopmental Work Group concluded that the many definitions of dyslexia and dysgraphia meant those terms would not be useful as disorder names or in the diagnostic criteria.
37 38DSM-5 Diagnosis of Disorder (Learning Disability) 315.00 (F81.0) With impairment in reading:
o Word reading accuracy o Reading rate or fluency o Reading comprehension o Note: Dyslexia is an alternative term used to refer to a pattern of
learning difficulties characterized by problems with accurate or fluent word recognition, poor decoding, and poor spelling abilities. If dyslexia is used to specify this particular pattern of difficulties, it is important also to specify any additional difficulties that are present, such as difficulties with reading comprehension or math reasoning.
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“More than 100 years of research into developmental reading difficulties has yet to reveal anything resembling one single explanation for all the symptoms of dyslexia.”
(Norton & Wolf, 2012, p. 430)
40Caveats for Moving Forward: There is still much more research that needs to be completed before we have a clear understanding of dyslexia, and effective instructional practices for people with dyslexia
41The relative mass and proximity of existing research
related to other individual differences in reading 42The possible powerful interactions between affective,
conative, and cognitive individual differences
As yet, there is no certifiable best method for teaching children who experience reading difficulty (Mathes et al, 2005). Therefore, the ILA research advisory committee has called for a research agenda for determining evidence-based methods for teaching students with dyslexia.
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ILA Research Advisory on Dyslexia
…the nature and causes of dyslexia, and even the utility of the concept, are still under investigation. Although genetics and neurology appear to play a role in reading difficulties, environment and instruction moderate that role.
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ILA Research Advisory on Dyslexia
• Research indicates that most students who experience literacy problems in their early years do not ultimately have long-term difficulties when appropriate instruction and intervention are provided.
• In fact, interventions that are appropriately responsive to individual needs have shown to reduce the number of children with continuing difficulties in reading to below 2% of the population (Vellutino et al, 2000)
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ILA Research Advisory on Dyslexia
Reviews of research focusing solely on decoding interventions have shown either small to moderate or variable effects that rarely persist over time, and little to no effects on more global reading skills.
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ILA Research Advisory on Dyslexia
Rather students classified as dyslexic have varying strengths and challenges, and teaching them is too complex a task for a scripted, one-size-fits-all program (Coyne et al, 2013; Phillips & Smith, 1997; Simmons, 2015). Optimal instruction calls for teachers’ professional expertise and responsiveness, and the freedom to act on the basis of that professionalism.
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