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Amy R. Lederberg

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Phonics: Day Three Phonics concepts are reinforced through recall of the language activity and phonological awareness activities. Recall Letter sound ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Amy R. Lederberg


1
The Development of an Emergent Literacy
Curriculum for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Children
  • Amy R. Lederberg
  • Educational Psychology Special
    EducationGeorgia State University
  • Presentation at IES Washington, DC
  • June 2008

2
Three Year IES Development Grant Research Team
  • Amy Lederberg, Educational Psychologist
  • Susan Easterbrooks, Deaf Educator/Teacher
    Educator
  • Carol Connor, Literacy Specialist, Speech
    Pathologist
  • Elizabeth Miller, Teacher of the Deaf, 16 years
  • Jessica Bergeron, Teacher of the Deaf, 5 years
  • Paul Alberto, SS Design Consultant

3
Overview
  • Year 1
  • Developed framework
  • Standardized assessments in fall and spring to
    establish baseline
  • Single-subject study of phonics
  • Year 2
  • Year-long implementation of curriculum by
    research-teacher in small groups (pull-out)
  • Replication of SS study of phonics
  • SS study of rhyming

4
Deaf and Hard of Hearing Children
  • Poor readers
  • Graduate at 4th grade reading level (median)
  • No specific curriculum for them except one based
    on whole language principles
  • New generation of children with more access to
    sound
  • Early identification (newborn screening)
  • Early Intervention
  • Cochlear implants and digital hearing aids

5
Year 1 Baseline
  • Assessment of language, literacy, speech
    perception skills of 50 deaf children in
    self-contained classrooms in large metro area at
    beginning and end of the year
  • Data confirmed children delayed in phonological
    awareness (especially rhyming), phonics, and
    vocabulary.
  • 75 of deaf/hard of hearing children were able to
    identify spoken wordstarget population for our
    curriculum

6
Guiding Principles of Curriculum Development
Begin with research on what works for hearing
children
Adapt it to the special needs of deaf children
Individualize to meet the needs of particular
children
7
Intervention
  • One hour integrated lessons four days a week by
    research-teachers
  • Phonics letter-sound correspondence
  • Vocabulary
  • Phonological Awareness segmentation, initial
    sound, rhyming, and blending
  • Print Awareness
  • Fluency
  • Comprehension narrative understanding

8
Phonics Day One
  • Phoneme-grapheme correspondences are taught by
    making a semantic connection through stories,
    pictures and extended language activities.
  • Planning for the Language Activity

9
Phonics Day Two
Sounds are presented and practiced in isolation
in a meaningful vocabulary-enriched language
activity.
10
Recall
Phonics Day Three
  • Phonics concepts are
  • reinforced through
  • recall of the language
  • activity and phonological
  • awareness activities.

11
Phonics Day Four
Students learn to combine learned phonemes to
make key words.
  • Letter sound correspondence is reinforced
    through Phoneme Fun books on days 2 4.

12
Year 1 Study 1
  • Study 1 used the stories and key words from
    Childrens Early Intervention (CEI) for Speech
    Language Reading (Tade, 1994).
  • Single case design to test the efficacy of
    phonics instruction using semantic association
    instructional strategy
  • Multiple baseline across content
  • 8 weeks long
  • Three (5,6, 7 year olds) children at state
    school for the deaf (ASL in classroom)
  • Two 4 year olds at oral private preschool
  • All able to identify spoken words on the Early
    Speech Perception Test

13
Phonics Dependent Variable
  • What sound does this letter make?
  • DV Number correct of phoneme-grapheme
    associations produced from 3 exemplars
  • Baseline Phase Assessed 8 graphemes
  • Intervention Phase (daily assessment) 3 trials
    of target phoneme and any previously taught
    phonemes until reached criterion (4 consecutive
    days at 100)
  • Probes (weekly) the same as baseline
  • Maintenance Probes probes continued to contain
    all graphemes

14
m
  • 6 year old male from the State School for the
    Deaf, uses speech supported sign language to
    communicate bilateral hearing aids, severe
    sensorineural hearing loss

b
t
s
p
15
Summary of Results- Study 1
  • Baseline established children knew almost all
    (long) vowels prior to intervention occasional
    consonant.
  • All children showed a strong functional relation
    for learning previously unknown correspondences
    (on average 5 graphemes)
  • All unknown phoneme-grapheme correspondences at
    100 after an average of 4.5 sessions (range
    1.6-7.2)
  • of overlapping data (POD) averaged across
    children equaled 28 for the consonants

16
Study 2
  • Same phonics instructional strategy embedded in
    hour/day integrated curriculum
  • Five 4-year-olds at oral preschool, all with
    cochlear implants
  • All able to identify spoken words on the Early
    Speech Perception Test
  • Same assessments as study 1 but less frequently
    (Bi-weekly instructional assessment probes every
    two weeks)
  • 6 week study focused on 6 phonemes (included
    vowels and consonants)

17
  • 4.5 year old female, unaided PTA110 (profound
    hearing loss), Cochlear implant

18
Summary of Results- Study 2
  • Replicated Study 1 findings
  • All children reached 100 (3 out of 3) for
    unknown phoneme-grapheme correspondences after an
    average of 2.7 sessions (range 2 to 4).
  • of overlapping data (POD) for all 5 children
    averaged to 24 for the consonants
  • Incorporated assessment into fluency chart (after
    instruction)

19
Rhyming
  • Using Single Subject Design as a Guide to Lesson
    Development

Mr. Fox His Rhyming Box
20
Rhyming
  • Assessments indicated deaf children very poor at
    rhymingmore than half unable to identify rhymes
  • Rhyming age-appropriate skill for 4-year-olds so
    cognitively should be able to acquire

21
Rhyming Design
  • Planned an ABC Design
  • A Baseline
  • B Exposure to nursery rhymes, fingerplays, and
    rhyming books
  • C Explicit teaching
  • Multiple Baseline Across Participants

22
Rhyming
  • DV identify which of three pictured words rhymes
    with the target picture

23
Rhyming Baseline
A small group of two participants with cochlear
implants.
24
Rhyming Intervention One
  • Nursery Rhyme Exposure
  • Students were engaged in nursery rhymes, songs
    and fingerplays and rhyming books on a daily
    basis with rhyming words pointed out by the
    teacher. Visual support was provided with
    pictures. Ex Listen, sky and eye rhyme.

25
Rhyming Intervention One
Data Dates
26
Rhyming Intervention Two
  • A Baseline
  • B Explicit instructions with visually-supported
    rhyming activities (principles used for other
    phonological awareness activities)
  • Students were given multiple opportunities to
    work with rhyming picture pairs in various
    activities during which rhymes and rimes were
    pointed out with explicit language. Ex wig and
    pig rhyme. They have the same sounds at the
    end. wig ig, pig ig. Students were
    encouraged to repeat the rhymes. Wig pig,
    they rhyme.

27
Rhyming Intervention Two
28
Rhyming Intervention Three
  • Families and Contrast with Auditory Emphasis
  • Prior knowledge of go together was built upon
    with the idea that we can hear words that go
    together. Students were then given opportunities
    to work with rhyme families and pairs with a
    strong emphasis on listening. Contrast was used
    to teach the concept of rhyme through many of the
    activities.

29
Rhyming Intervention Three
30
Three more students in Interventions Two and
Three. Sue and Mary made significant progress in
the final intervention. Viki showed a slight
improvement but was not greater than chance.
31
Rhyming Results
  • Ended with a pilot study that guided intervention
  • The final intervention phase was successful with
    four of the five participants each at a mean for
    the last three assessments above 90.
  • An actual study using the last intervention is
    planned for the fall.

32
Challenges for using SS designs
  • Time for assessment vs. time for intervention
  • Integrated curriculum makes it difficult to
    precisely define IV
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