Full bibliography

An information-processing framework for understanding reading disability

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
An information-processing framework for understanding reading disability
Abstract
Several years ago, when the senior author of this chapter taught in a resource room for learning-disabled children, she made a disturbing discovery. This discovery involved the reading-disabled youngsters, who comprised the majority of the children in the program. All these youngsters entered the program with poor decoding skills, but once exposed to the intensive phonic program used in the resource room, they generally learned to decode individual words with alacrity; that is, they could grasp phonic rules, memorize sounds for various letters and letter combinations, and apply the rules and sounds when reading individual words. The disturbing thing, particularly to someone who had had excessive faith in the curative powers of a phonic approach to teaching reading, was that the children continued to be poor readers. Now, however, their difficulties involved higher level aspects of reading. Their oral reading was discontinuous, effortful, and sometimes painfully slow; their reading comprehension was frequently poor; and the older children lacked the study strategies so important for success in content area subjects such as social studies and science. © 2014, Stephen J. Ceci. All rights reserved.
Book Title
Handbook of Cognitive, Social, and Neuropsychological Aspects of Learning Disabilities
Volume
2
Date
2014
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Pages
3-31
ISBN
9781135877941 (ISBN); 0898596823 (ISBN); 9780898597974 (ISBN)
Citation Key
spearInformationprocessingFrameworkUnderstanding2014
Archive
Scopus
Language
English
Extra
Journal Abbreviation: Handb. of Cognitive, Soc., and Neuropsychological Aspects of Learning Disabilities
Citation
Spear, L. C., & Sternberg, R. J. (2014). An information-processing framework for understanding reading disability. In Handbook of Cognitive, Social, and Neuropsychological Aspects of Learning Disabilities (Vol. 2, pp. 3–31). Taylor and Francis. Scopus. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315060217-5