[NIFL-LD:4951] Re: LD and intensive phonics

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Subject: [NIFL-LD:4951] Re: LD and intensive phonics
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Hello all,

It is good to see Robin Schwarz back on the list.   As a recognized expert in 
the field of  LD/ESOL, her participation on this  discussion list is a real 
benefit for those that work with an important  population in adult education.
 
 
Rochelle Kenyon
Moderator, NIFL-Learning  Disabilities Discussion  List
_RKenyon721@aol.com_ (mailto:RKenyon721@aol.com)  
 
 
 

Original Message-----
From: Robinschwarz1
To:  nifl-ld@nifl.gov
Sent: Tue, 18 Oct 2005 11:28:58 -0400
Subject: Re:  [NIFL-LD:4927] Re: LD and intensive phonics

Sorry to be chiming in on  this somewhat late-- I was traveling.   
Aaron's reference to Ken  Pugh's work is great-- the point of 
Pugh's research, to my mind, is that the  process of reading is the same 
in any language and occurs in the same part  of the brain.  When it can 
be observed that it does not, we can predict  that that person will have 
more difficulty with "standard" teaching than the  person whose brain 
does it in the more common, if you will, way.  

John has a point about "synthetic phonics"--the process of making  
English more predictable to decode.   It has been observed by  numerous 
researchers in the last decade that relatively few persons show up  with 
reading problems (called dyslexia when reading is a very 
difficult  skill to acquire) in languages which are more "transparent" 
or regular in  their orthography--e.g. Italian, Hungarian, Finnish, 
Korean-.  The  effect of learning in those language is the same as with 
the synthetic  phonics John is discussing-- the sound-symbol system is 
completely regular  and easy to predict.  I observed that in Italy, for 
example, children  are able to spell almost every word in Italian by 
second grade because  Italian is so regular.  

Because of this phenomenon, it was  believed for a time that there was 
no dyslexia in these languages.  But  studies such as the one Ken Pugh 
and others have done show that the anomaly  that causes difficulty 
in becoming a fluent reader is present in persons in  all cultures and 
languages.  It is only that their compensatory  skills--provided either 
by the language they are learning in, or in the case  of English, by 
extremely skilled teaching and hard work--have allowed them  to overcome 
the anomaly.   Recent attempts to find out if in fact  dyslexia-- or 
that brain anomaly--could be detected have shown that readers  in these 
transparent languages who have the anomaly still read more slowly  
relative to their non-impaired peers--though on an absolute scale  
comparing ALL readers, their slower reading is hard to  detect.    

Many features of English contribute to  its being such a difficult 
language for those persons with dyslexia--i.e.  the well-documented 
brain anomaly causing the processing of the sound symbol  association to 
occur in other places in the brain. 

First, of  course, is the incredible range of sounds and symbols a 
skilled reader must  deal with.  The figure of 1,100 -- maybe more- of 
actual graphemes  (That is, ways we represent sounds)  in English has 
come across my  radar screen recently.  This requires amazing 
flexibility of the brain.  .  

Second is the fact that up through second grade at least,  more than 
half of the words needed to be a fluent reader are "sight  words"--words 
that cannot be easily put into phonological categories.   Thus an 
English reader must learn not just the phonics of English, but a  body 
of sight words at the same time. It requires that a truly skilled  
reader have an excellent SIGHT, or visual memory, --as well as skill in  
sound symbol association 

Thirds, add to that the fact that  English has, as we know, parallel 
vocabularies-- the Anglo-Saxon and the  Norman, plus who knows how many 
others, which results in an incredibly large  lexicon--or number of 
words that we use. ( the most recent OED has over  800,000 words in 
it, WAY more than any other language on the planet)   This means a 
reader must be skilled at understanding and using synonyms and  multiple 
meanings of words (some piece of literature I found pointed out  that in 
one child's basal reader, the word "play" was used in 5 different  ways 
in about three pages!!).  English VALUES variation--which means  that 
when learners learn to read, unless the text is highly controlled, they  
do NOT see the same words--and the same patterns of words-- over and  
over as does a reader in Italian, for example. 

Fourth, because  of the size and multi-lingual nature of the language, a 
skilled reader must  have a good understanding of and use of 
morphology--the pieces and parts  that make up English.  Otherwise, as 
those of us who have tutored hard  core non-readers know, every word is 
a new word.  This understanding of  the word parts--roots and affixes-- 
develops relatively late in the literacy  process.

and fifth, one of the fundamental skills required to be  literate is 
phonological AWARENESS--that is, to put it simply, the  understanding of 
the sound chunks of a language and that these chunks can be  
manipulated.   Weakness in phonological awareness has been shown  time 
and again to be strongly associated with dyslexia.   So what  synthetic 
phonics appears to be doing is addressing this fundamental  weakness in 
beginning readers before the weakness interferes with their  attempt to 
make sense of print.

In English, one of the most  fundamental constructs of sound--and 
requirements in phonological  awareness-- is the rhyme scheme, made up 
of units known as onset-rhyme--that  is, the beginning of the unit , /c/ 
and the rime (spelled rime because it  refers to the unit, not the 
function) -/at/.  Nearly every English word  is constructed this way, 
either simple words or in the syllables in longer  words, and if a 
learner is not fundamentally skilled in hearing and  constructing rhyme, 
then reading is VERY difficult, if not impossible. Try  it-- ask a 
struggling reader you know to produce rhymes for simple  words.  I have 
repeatedly had amazing success with severely impaired  readers by 
working at getting them to hear and produce rhyme--often a LONG  
process! 

But finally, I want to add my voice to those who  caution that many 
things may be going on.  Not all people who struggle  to read have 
phonological problems or phonological awareness  difficulties.   There 
is a good body of research and plenty of  evidence to show that many who 
have mastered the system but do not read well  have visual difficulties 
that interfere with reading.  Vision functions  in poor readers need to 
be checked routinely--all vision functions, not just  near and far point 
acuity, but binocularityand tracking-- how the eyes focus  on one point 
and then move smoothly across print.  I cannot even count  the 
struggling readers I have assessed who have ONLY this difficulty-- and  
some who have both this and phonological problems.  These visual  
problems can be addressed in young peobinocularity ple with vision  
therapy and in older readers with prisms that offset many of the  
problems.  

And finally, because I won't probably jump in  again for a while, let me 
agree with some who have said that dyslexia, which  is a real condition, 
does not affect just reading.  It may be  associated with a broader 
spectrum of learning disabilities, which are  difficult to manage in 
real life.  And my own concern is that if  dyslexia exists, foreign 
language learning is often, if not usually,  significantly impacted.  A 
person who has had no difficulty reading in  their first language, 
either because of good teaching or because the  language was not 
difficult to master, but who has the brain anomaly referred  to earlier, 
is very likely to have a lot of difficulty when encountering a  foreign 
language.  

So let us not dismiss dyslexia as a  result of poor teaching.  It is 
true that most who end up with reading  problems could have been helped 
early on to avoid these problems, but the  difficulty is real and should 
not be swept aside in an effort to show the  effectiveness of a good 
reading program. 

Robin  Schwarz,
Specialist in LD/ ESOL
Partner, The TLP Group
Columbus,  OH

-----Original Message-----
From: Aaron Kohring  <akohring@utk.edu>
To: Multiple recipients of list  <nifl-ld@literacy.nifl.gov>
Sent: Tue, 11 Oct 2005 09:09:16 -0400  (EDT)
Subject: [NIFL-LD:4927] Re: LD and intensive phonics

John,  

Sorry I couldn't respond earlier- I have been out of town the past  
week. Kenneth Pugh at Yale Univ. has also done some recent brain  
research using MRIs and looking at what happens in the brain when  
someone is reading. There is a short write-up here on his research 
area:  http://www.haskins.yale.edu/Haskins/STAFF/pugh.html 

I don't know  if more has been published yet. 

Aaron 

At 11:04 AM  9/30/2005 -0400, you wrote: 

>Hello Aaron, 
>  
>Thank you for the references. I had a good read of the article on  
>Neurobiology, and it is very informative and well written. 
>  
>However I have some problems with it. From what I have seen, none of  
the 
>research on dyslexia has taken into account a key environmental  factor 
- how 
>the subjects had been taught to read. Moreover none of  the 
researchers, to 
>my knowledge, have looked at children who have  been given intensive 
phonics 
>training at the start of primary  school, by either explicit phonics or 
>synthetic phonics. Perhaps the  patterns of brain activation would be 
>different, if the subjects had  been taught in a different way. In the 
>Clackmannanshire study, all the  children were taught to read 
successfully 
>using synthetic phonics,  and there was little or no "dyslexia" 
apparent. 
>And I have heard of  reseach suggesting that the left brain can indeed 
by 
>"activated" to  help people overcome reading problems. 
> 
>Therefore, I am  suspicious when the article says that "dyslexia is a 
>persistent and  chronic condition". It seems there might be effective 
>remediation that  could activate the parts of the brain that are used 
by 
>normal  readers. A key giveaway in the article is as follows: 
> 
>[quote]  
> The awareness that all words can be decomposed into these basic  
elements of 
>language (phonemes) allows the reader to decipher the  reading code. In 
order 
>to read, a child has to develop the insight  that spoken words can be 
pulled 
>apart into phonemes and that the  letters in a written word represent 
these 
>sounds. This so-called  phonemic awareness is largely missing in 
dyslexic 
>children and  adults. Results from large and well-studied populations 
with 
>reading  disability confirm that in young school-aged children, as well 
as in  
>adolescents, a deficit in phonology represents the most robust and  
specific 
>correlate of reading disability. 
>[end quote]  
> 
>The explicit phonics and synthetic phonics are designed to give  this 
>phonemic awareness from the start. The other skill these methods  
impart is 
>"blending" - the ability to put the phonemes together to  form (spoken) 
>words. This skill is not mentioned in the article but is a  key skill 
for 
>reading. 
> 
>There is a great danger of  looking at the brain of a dyslexic person, 
and 
>saying the brain has  been "disrupted" or "impaired", when in fact it 
may be 
>just the way  the person was taught. Is there any evidence to the 
contrary? 
>  
>What I'd like to see is brain scans of the Clackmannanshire pupils  
reading, 
>to see which parts of the brain they are using, especially  for those 
pupils 
>with dyslexic genes. 
> 
>Cheers from  Chiswick, 
> 
>John 
> 
>P.S. Ian, I'm copying this to  you, because I read you'd done some fMRI 
with 
>researchers at  Bristol. 
> 
> 
> 
>----- Original Message -----  
>From: "Aaron Kohring" <akohring@utk.edu> 
>To: "Multiple  recipients of list" <nifl-ld@literacy.nifl.gov> 
>Sent: Thursday,  September 29, 2005 5:00 PM 
>Subject: [NIFL-LD:4893] Re: LD and intensive  phonics 
> 
> 
> > John, 
> > 
> > Yes,  there is research into some of these areas you mention. 
> > 
>  > I'd recommend taking a look at the Focus on Basics article: The 
>  > Neurobiology of Reading and Dyslexia: http://www.ncsall.net/?id=278  
> > 
> > Also, look at the resources under the section on  Teaching/Learning 
related 
> > to instruction:  http://ldlink.coe.utk.edu/research.htm 
> > 
> > Other good  instructional guides are found here: 
> >  http://ldlink.coe.utk.edu/ld_instruction.htm 
> > 
> > Aaron  
> > 
> > 
> > At 11:26 AM 9/29/2005 -0400, you  wrote: 
> >>Hello everybody, 
> >> 
> >>It  seems I was too late for Christopher, and a bit off topic, since 
my 
>  >>questions were not related to technology. But I'd be interested to  
have 
> >>answers to these questions. 
> >> 
>  >>Concerning the first question I asked, what kind of particular  
problems do 
> >>people with LD have with reading. Is there  anything different from 
the 
> >>"specific" learning difficulty,  which is dyslexia (or at least 
embraces 
> >>dyslexia)? Is the  difficulty in phonological awareness, or in 
blending 
>  >>skills, or in spelling/decoding rules, or in comprehension, or a  
mixture 
> >>of 
> >>all these? If it is a mix, is  there a characteristic mix? Has any 
> >>research 
>  >>been done on this? 
> >> 
> >>On the second  question, I have heard of people with LD being taught 
to 
>  >>recognise whole words by associating them with symbols. This seems  
to be 
> >>a 
> >>denial of the fact that letters  represent sounds, and they should 
be 
> >>taught 
>  >>how to decode words, by sounding out the letters and blending those  
sounds 
> >>together. But one person I asked said that "phonics  was not 
suitable for 
> >>children with LD". I cannot believe  this. Is there research 
evidence on 
> >>whether intensive  phonics teaching is effective or not for people 
with LD, 
>  >>regardless of age? 
> >> 
> >>The third question  is about cause and effect. If poor readers are 
> >>utilising  
> >>their right brain when they should be using their left brain,  they 
could 
> >>end 
> >>up with underdeveloped left  brains, i.e. not as relatively large 
(compared 
> >>to right  brain) as normal. That would be an _effect_ of lack of 
use. 
>  >>Alternatively a left brain problem (e.g. damage) could be the  
_cause_ of 
> >>their poor reading, from a young age, and they  would grow up with a 
> >>relatively small left brain. So is it  cause or effect? What does 
the 
> >>research say? And is there  anything that can be done for the older 
child 
> >>or 
>  >>adult person to help in left brain development? 
> >>  
> >>---------- 
> >> 
> >>----- Original  Message ----- 
> >>From: "John Nissen" <jn@cloudworld.co.uk>  
> >>To: "Multiple recipients of list"  <nifl-ld@literacy.nifl.gov> 
> >>Sent: Friday, September 23,  2005 10:26 PM 
> >>Subject: [NIFL-LD:4872] LD and intensive phonics  
> >> 
> >> 
> >> > 
> >>  > Hello Christopher, 
> >> > 
> >> > I am sorry  I coming into this session rather late. I hope I am 
not too 
>  >> > late 
> >> > to join in with some questions.  
> >> > 
> >> > 1. Do people with LD have  different teaching requirements? 
> >> > 
> >> > I  am trying to find out whether there is any difference in the 
teaching  
> >> > requirements for teaching people with LD to read, and  teaching 
people 
> >> > with 
> >> > dyslexia  to read. I haven't found any factor to distinguish 
them, as 
>  >> > regards their reading (dis)ability. 
> >> >  
> >> > 2. Is poor reading due to poor teaching? 
>  >> > 
> >> > Also I want to find out to what extent the  poor reading, or 
> >> > non-reading, 
> >> > is  
> >> > due to misguided teaching. I often see that there are  attempts 
to 
> >> > teach 
> >> > whole word  recognition rather than word decoding, especially for 
people 
>  >> > with 
> >> > LD, who may be considered incapable of  the necessary 
phonological 
> >> > awareness. 
>  >> > In the Clackmannanshire study, it was shown that a 'phonics  
first and 
> >> > fast' 
> >> > approach  worked marvels for all the children, and by the end of 
primary 
>  >> > school they were three years ahead in reading age compared to  
their 
> >> > peers 
> >> > taught by the  'conventional' teaching of a mixture of methods 
> >> >  (including 
> >> > an 
> >> > element of phonics,  together with guessing strategies, etc.). I 
> >> > suspect  
> >> > that anybody who has learnt to speak is also capable of  the 
> >> > phonological 
> >> > awareness  required for reading and writing, given appropriate 
teaching. 
>  >> > 
> >> > 3. Left brain development for rapid  decoding 
> >> > 
> >> > Finally I wonder whether  the right brain development in some 
poor 
> >> > readers  
> >> > is 
> >> > because they have developed  skills for whole word recognition, 
and with 
> >> > the  
> >> > right teaching, their left brain would be developed to  enable 
rapid 
> >> > decoding, even in older children.  
> >> 
> >>BTW, I've written about the teaching of a  brand of intensive 
phonics 
> >>called 
>  >>"synthetic phonics" here: 
>  >>http://www.cloudworld.co.uk/teaching-synthetic-phonics.htm 
>  >>and I'd be grateful for comments. 
> >> 
>  >>Cheers from Chiswick, 
> >> 
> >>John 
>  >> 
> >>John Nissen, 
> >>director Cloudworld Ltd  
> >>maker of the WordAloud assistive reader 
>  >>http://www.cloudworld.co.uk 
> > 
> > Aaron Kohring  
> > Coordinator, LINCS Literacy & Learning Disabilities Special  
Collection 
> > 
> > Center for Literacy Studies,  University of Tennessee 
> > EFF Center for Training and Technical  Assistance 
> > Phone:(865) 974-4109 main 
> > (865) 974-4258  direct 
> > Fax: (865) 974-3857 
> > e-mail: akohring@utk.edu  
> > 
> > 

Aaron Kohring 
Coordinator, LINCS  Literacy & Learning Disabilities Special Collection 

Center for  Literacy Studies, University of Tennessee 
EFF Center for Training and  Technical Assistance 
Phone:(865) 974-4109 main 
(865) 974-4258  direct 
Fax: (865) 974-3857 
e-mail: akohring@utk.edu 



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