|
Kids'
Reading Problems Can Emerge Later
Excerpt
By
Serena Gordon,
HealthDay
Parents and educators may assume that if children are reading
well in the first and second grades, they will continue to read
well in later grades.
That's not always the case, reports
a new study: Some youngsters develop "late-emerging"
reading disabilities.
The problem, says study author
Hollis Scarborough, is that these children aren't being identified
by schools as having difficulties because tests designed to pick
up these problems are generally administered in earlier grades.
"We found that some kids who
are successful readers can show rather abrupt changes or declines
starting in fourth or fifth grades," says Scarborough, a
senior research scientist at Haskins Laboratories in New Haven,
Conn. Haskins is a nonprofit research center for the study of
speech, language and reading. The study appears in the June issue
of the Journal of Educational Psychology.
Scarborough and her colleagues
recruited 161 children for this study. The group consisted of
74 fourth-graders and 87 fifth-graders, and was almost equally
split between male and female. Ninety-five percent of the kids
were white. The children were from 12 different schools in the
greater Philadelphia area -- six were in affluent communities
and six were in more socioeconomically diverse areas.
The researchers examined the children's
reading, language and cognitive skills.
They found 95 students had age-appropriate
reading skills, 35 who were identified with reading problems before
third grade, and 31 with late-emerging reading difficulty. Only
nine of the youngsters with a late-emerging reading disability
had been identified by their school.
"Typically, kids with reading
disabilities show up early," explains Scarborough. "One
possibility why the schools aren't identifying these kids is that
no one expects this to happen. It's likely that in a year or two
a lot of these reading disabilities will be picked up."
Not all of the kids had the same
difficulties with reading, reports the study.
"Some show declines in comprehension,
and some kids have problems with recognizing printed words,"
Scarborough says.
Thirty-two percent of those in
the late-emerging reading disability group had strong word recognition
but difficulty with reading comprehension, while 35 percent had
trouble with words, phonetics and spelling, but had no trouble
with overall comprehension. The remainder of the group -- 33 percent
-- had trouble in both word recognition and comprehension.
"The number one thing schools
can do is to be alert that this does happen," Scarborough
says. To catch these problems, however, requires individual assessment,
which is too expensive and unnecessary to do for all children.
However, Scarborough says if your child seems to be struggling,
you should seek an individual assessment. She cautions that schools
may not initially be receptive to the idea.
"It's a child's right to learn
how to read," says Susan J. Schwartz, clinical coordinator
at the Institute for Learning and Academic Achievement at the
New York University Child Study Center, who says she wasn't surprised
by the study's findings.
She says parents need to make sure
their children are getting sufficient and appropriate help. For
a first-grader, whose job in school is almost exclusively learning
to read, Schwarz says extra help once a week is not enough. Likewise,
once a week is not enough for a fourth-grader who is having reading
difficulties because his job is now to read to learn, she says.
If your child isn't getting the
help she needs, Schwarz says you can petition the school district's
committee on special education to get extra assistance.
More information
Here are some tips from the American
Academy of Pediatrics on helping your child learn to read.
To learn more about getting special help for your child, read
this article from the Nemours
Foundation.
Reference
Source 101
For
more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|