Reading comprehension for special needs
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Reading comprehension for special needs is a modified way of reading to accommodate the specific needs of a child who may suffer from a language impairment. In conjunction with an audiologist, occupational therapist, and special education teachers, a team of caregivers can coordinate special reading comprehension assistance based on a child's particular special needs.
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[edit] Background
Reading is the process of retrieving and comprehending some form of stored information or ideas. Reading to young children is a recommended way to instill language, expression, and to promote comprehension of text.
[edit] Language impairments
A language impairment is a learning disorder characterized by an impairment in the comprehension and use of oral and/or written language. Which significantly interferes with communication and academic achievement while a speech impairment is an impairment in speech production which significantly interferes with the student's communication and learning (e.g., articulation, and/or phonological, disorder, apraxia, dysfluency/stuttering, dysarthria, voice and resonance. However, it should be noted that speech and language impairments can also occur independently.
[edit] Accommodations and modifications
In order to complement a child's learning experience, caregivers can modify their reading technique in ways that may promote learning. These are things that one should be aware of when facilitating reading comprehension for children with special needs:
- "finger following" - reading by pointing to the word and reading it aloud.
- The "talk aloud" method - readers are asked to "think aloud" as they read, to determine what inferences they are drawing from a text.
- Break up long sentences.
- Reduce difficult vocabulary load.
- Reduce concept density.
- When using a pronoun be sure that the antecedent is very clear.
- Do not omit words such as: "that" where such words will clarify a sentence connection.
- Stay with simple co-ordinating conjunctions (e.g., but, so, for, and) and avoid less common transitional words (e.g., however, as a consequence, nevertheless, although).
- Keep cause-and-effect expressions in a very simple in form.
- Keep conditional expressions which influence the meaning of a statement to a minimum (such as; if, when, assuming that, suppose, provided that, etc.). If there is no other way to avoid using a difficult word, include a brief explanation in parentheses, however keep parenthetical explanations to a minimum.
- If an important basic or technical word is to be taught: Make meaning and application absolutely clear.
- Use context as a memory aid.
- For a new term, repeat the word numerous times in a variety of contexts.
- Passive voice verbs. Negative forms of verbs and other expressions of negation.
- Too many modifying forms, such as prepositional phrases, relative clauses. (If a relative clause must be used, the relative pronoun [who, which, that, where, etc.] should be next to the word to which it refers). *Stylistic embellishments, such as rhetorical inversions.
- Colloquial and idiomatic expressions. Cut wordiness while retaining simple English. Avoid the use of idioms.
[edit] External links
- Special Education Resources on the Internet SERI a collection of Internet accessible information resources of interest to those involved in the fields related to Special Education.
- SNOW designed to serve as a resource centre for teachers dealing with special needs students.
- literacyonline.org
- Poverty, Racism and Literacy. ERIC Digest.
- Literacy Interventions in Low Resource Environments: An International Perspective. ERIC Digest.
- Literacy in SIL - Promotes literacy in minority languages.
- REAL: Youth to Youth - Supports literacy in rural India.
- Computer program for teaching literacy
- Illiteracy in the Arab world
- Teaching children with special needs how to read to read
- Widgit Software
- Symbol World - On-line magazine using symbols for the reading impaired
- Various software for special needs — to increase reading comprehension
- Communication and language development
- Whole language approach
- Ontario Ministry of Education – Province-wide standards for special education - Ontario, Canada