Enhancing reading skills and reading self-concept of children with reading difficulties : adopting a dual approach intervention

This article describes the need for, and the structure and contents of, a reading program to help support primary school children disadvantaged by reading difficulties. The innovative psychosocial reading intervention, Reading for Life (R4L), has been designed to offer new solutions for strengthenin...

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Veröffentlicht in:Australian journal of educational & developmental psychology 2014-01, Vol.14 (2014), p.131-143
Hauptverfasser: Hornery, Samantha, Seaton, Marjorie, Tracey, Danielle, Craven, Rhonda G, Yeung, Alexander S
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container_end_page 143
container_issue 2014
container_start_page 131
container_title Australian journal of educational & developmental psychology
container_volume 14
creator Hornery, Samantha
Seaton, Marjorie
Tracey, Danielle
Craven, Rhonda G
Yeung, Alexander S
description This article describes the need for, and the structure and contents of, a reading program to help support primary school children disadvantaged by reading difficulties. The innovative psychosocial reading intervention, Reading for Life (R4L), has been designed to offer new solutions for strengthening reading interventions by combining cutting-edge advances in self-concept interventions along with reading skills training. The program, delivered by trained and supported volunteers, lasts for 15 weeks. It uses a novel dual approach which aims to improve students' reading skills and simultaneously enhance their reading-related self-concepts. R4L was designed to capitalise on theories from reading and self-concept research to produce an effective reading intervention that takes into account both cognitive and psychosocial factors. Reading activities, based on best-practice research, form the basis of the intervention, as children with reading difficulties learn core skills for literacy. Phonological awareness, a strong predictor of future reading success, and sight word identification, an important skill to reduce cognitive load when reading comprise two large components of the program. Metacognitive strategy training during supported reading activities is also included, by providing the children with a bookmark containing reading strategies. Throughout these activities, attributional retraining and performance feedback are utilised to develop children's reading self-concept, specifically their perceptions of their abilities and feelings about those abilities. This article demonstrates how such a dual approach to enhancing reading skills and reading self-concept can be operationalised. [Author abstract, ed]
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source ERIC - Full Text Only (Discovery); EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; EBSCOhost Education Source; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Australia
Burt Word Reading Test
Children
Elementary School Students
Foreign Countries
Generalization
Holistic Approach
Interpersonal Relationship
Intervention
Neale Analysis of Reading Ability
Needs Assessment
Phonological Awareness
Primary education
Primary school students
Reading Difficulties
Reading Instruction
Reading Programs
Reading Skills
Reading teaching
Remedial reading
Self Concept
Self Description Questionnaire
Sight Vocabulary
Teaching Methods
Teamwork
Transfer of Training
Volunteers
title Enhancing reading skills and reading self-concept of children with reading difficulties : adopting a dual approach intervention
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