Tímarit um menntarannsóknir - 01.01.2009, Side 46

Tímarit um menntarannsóknir - 01.01.2009, Side 46
44 Tímarit um menntarannsóknir, 6. árgangur 2009 spelling problems. With Direct Instruction (DI), specified skills students require are explicitly taught to mastery (Engelmann and Carnine, 1991; Marrchand- Martella, Slocum, & Martella, 2004). Precision Teaching (PT) (Lindsley, 1964) is a system of fluency building strategies and tactics derived from Experimental Behavior Analysis that allows teaching effectiveness to be measured (Binder, 1996; Potts, Eshleman, & Cooper, 1993). Accumulating data based on empirical demonstrations suggest that when combined, DI and PT represent a powerful educational technology (Binder & Watkins, 1990; Johnson & Layng, 1992; Johnson & Street, 2004). Method The Direct Instruction implementation proce- dure of Model – Lead – Test was followed. SAFMEDS cards (see Graf & Lindsley, 2002) were applied for discrimination training. In addition to frequent intermittent verbal praise, clicks (Pryor, 1985) were tagged as an immediate consequence on correct responding during some of the instruction and fluency practices. Component tool skills in decoding individual sounds and letters, followed by blending sounds, were intensively trained for 60 hours through hear/say, see/say, hear/write and think/write learning channels. Composite texts for decoding were introduced just towards the end of the program. Results The obtained frequency data on decoding fluency were recorded and analyzed on Standard Celeration Charts. They show that intensive training of phonemic tool skills to high frequencies leads to fluency in complex task performance like reading words and composite texts based on the same phoneme – grapheme correspondence. When assessed on two composite texts the girl was able to read the reference text coherently at 132 correct syllables per minute, having accelerated 3.6x from the start of the program. She also read the second assessment text at almost the same speed. The girl was assessed again seven months after the program ended. She had retained her reading speed and improved to 150 syllables per minute on the two texts, and her skills generalized to two other texts that were considered more advanced. The data also showed a twofold acceleration within one lesson in reading irregularly spelled words. A triple acceleration within one lesson was obtained in discriminating between words with single and double consonants in their middle, which is a common auditory problem in Icelandic. Discussion This teaching intervention was exploratory and demonstrated that the technique of combined Direct Instruction and Precision Teaching can be an impressive independent variable for gaining reading fluency. In general the present results lend additional support to the growing body of evidence that demonstrate the effectiveness of DI – PT procedures (see in Moran & Malott, 2004). In particular this study included a new language – Icelandic, and extended previous findings on teaching a student with autism to read in Icelandic by the DI – PT technique (Ragnarsdóttir, 2007) to a student with dyslexia. The results are discussed in relevance to recent findings of functional magnetic resonance imaging of the brain. They show that besides accelerating reading fluency, intensive phonological training modifies the structure and the function of reading regions in the brain of students with dyslexia (Shaywitz et al., 2003). Guðríður Adda Ragnarsdóttir
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