Reading Comprehension and Fluency: Examining the Effects of Tutoring and Video Self-Modeling on First-Grade Students with Reading Difficulties

The need for research-based instructional support for culturally and linguistically diverse students with reading difficulties is a national priority. In this rural Hawaii study, teachers and parents selected four first-grade students who were experiencing delays in reading fluency and comprehension...

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Veröffentlicht in:Learning disability quarterly 2004-05, Vol.27 (2), p.89-103
Hauptverfasser: Hitchcock, Caryl H., Prater, Mary Anne, Dowrick, Peter W.
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Prater, Mary Anne
Dowrick, Peter W.
description The need for research-based instructional support for culturally and linguistically diverse students with reading difficulties is a national priority. In this rural Hawaii study, teachers and parents selected four first-grade students who were experiencing delays in reading fluency and comprehension skills to receive tutoring and video self-modeling interventions. Two students were identified as having specific learning disabilities, one as being developmentally delayed, and one was in the process of being referred for special education. Community partners were trained to provide tutoring with the 25-step ACE reading protocol. Two 2-minute self-modeling videotapes were constructed: the first depicted the student fluently reading a passage; the second showed the student applying a story map and successfully answering comprehension questions. A multiple-baseline design across two behaviors (reading fluency and comprehension) was used to observe the effect of each intervention on reading fluency and comprehension skills. Reading fluency, measured in number of correct words per minute, doubled for three students and quadrupled for the fourth by the end of eight weeks. Reading comprehension, measured in number of correct responses, reached pre-established criteria. Viewing the self-modeling videotapes was associated with reduced variability and maintenance of increased performance. Follow-up indicated that gains maintained for six months. Teachers and parents reported generalization to classroom and home.
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subjects Behavior
Case studies
Children
Children & youth
Children with disabilities
Classrooms
Cognition & reasoning
Cognitive ability
Communities
Comprehension
Councils
Developmental Delays
Disability
Education
Education, Rural
Elementary education
Elementary school students
Fluency
Grade 1
Hawaii
Intervention
Language diversity
Language Minorities
Learning
Learning disabilities
Learning disabled
Learning Processes
Literacy
Measures (Individuals)
Objectives
Phonics
Reading
Reading Comprehension
Reading Difficulties
Reading Fluency
Reading Improvement
Reading instruction
Reading Materials
Reading Skills
Rural Areas
Sight Vocabulary
Skills
Special education
Special needs students
Students with disabilities
Study and teaching
Teachers
Teaching
Teaching Methods
Thinking Skills
Tutoring
Tutors and tutoring
Video modeling
title Reading Comprehension and Fluency: Examining the Effects of Tutoring and Video Self-Modeling on First-Grade Students with Reading Difficulties
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