Publication | Closed Access
Language Delays, Reading Delays, and Learning Difficulties
54
Citations
50
References
2007
Year
Second Language LearningLanguage DevelopmentAtypical Language DevelopmentEducationPsycholinguisticsLiteracy DevelopmentReading DisabilitiesLanguage LearningChild LiteracyEarly LiteracyChild LanguageLanguage AcquisitionReading DifficultiesReadingLanguage StudiesLanguage DelaysInstructional DialogueLanguage DisorderEarly EducationSpecial EducationLanguage ComprehensionLanguage InterventionLinguisticsDialogue Levels
Researchers have hypothesized four levels of instructional dialogue and claimed that teachers can improve children's language development by incorporating these dialogue levels in their classrooms. It has also been hypothesized that enhancing children's early language development enhances children's later reading development. This quasi-experimental research study investigated both of these hypotheses using a collaborative service delivery model for Grade 1 children with language difficulties from a socially and economically disadvantaged urban community in Australia. Comparing the end-of-year reading achievement scores for the 57 children who received the language intervention with those of the 59 children in the comparison group, the findings from this research are supportive of both hypotheses. The interrelationships between learning difficulties, reading difficulties, and language difficulties are discussed along with children's development in vocabulary, use of memory strategies and verbal reasoning, and the need for multidimensional programming.
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