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1
Examining the Underlying Dimensions of Morphological Awareness and Vocabulary Knowledge.
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2
Reconsidering the simple view of reading in an intriguing case of equivalent models: commentary on Tunmer and Chapman (2012).
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3
Applying a Multiple Group Causal Indicator Modeling Framework to the Reading Comprehension Skills of Third, Seventh, and Tenth Grade Students.
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4
Uniqueness and Overlap: Characteristics and Longitudinal Correlates of Native Chinese Children's Writing in English as a Foreign Language.
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5
Examining agreement and longitudinal stability among traditional and RTI-based definitions of reading disability using the affected-status agreement statistic.
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6
Text Comprehension Mediates Morphological Awareness, Syntactic Processing, and Working Memory in Predicting Chinese Written Composition Performance.
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7
Dynamic assessment and its implications for RTI models.
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8
Modeling the development of written language.
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9
Rapid serial naming and reading ability: the role of lexical access.
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10
Developmental relations between reading fluency and reading comprehension: a longitudinal study from Grade 1 to Grade 2.
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11
Comparing two forms of dynamic assessment and traditional assessment of preschool phonological awareness.
Abstract: The goal of the current study was to compare two forms of dynamic assessment and standard assessment of preschool children's phonological awareness. The first form of dynamic assessment was a form of scaffolding in which item formats were modified in response to an error so as to make the task easier or more explicit. The second form of dynamic assessment was direct instruction of the phonological awareness tasks. The results indicate that preschool children's phonological awareness can be assessed using standard assessment procedures, provided the items require processing units larger than the individual phoneme. No advantage was found in reliability or validity for either dynamic assessment condition relative to the standard assessment condition. Dynamic assessment does not appear to improve reliability or validity of phonological awareness assessments when preschool children are given tasks that they can perform using standard administration procedures. ; P50 HD052120, P50 HD052120-04, P50 HD052120-05, P50HD052120 ; This NIH-funded author manuscript originally appeared in PubMed Central at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3179788.
Keyword: Awareness; Child; Child Language; Female; Humans; Male; Models; Phonetics; Preschool; Psychological; Reproducibility of Results
URL: http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A330489/datastream/TN/view/Comparing%20two%20forms%20of%20dynamic%20assessment%20and%20traditional%20assessment%20of%20preschool%20phonological%20awareness.jpg
https://doi.org/10.1177/0022219411407861
http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_pmch_21685350
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12
Learning letter names and sounds: effects of instruction, letter type, and phonological processing skill.
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13
Developing Early Literacy Skills: A Meta-Analysis of Alphabet Learning and Instruction.
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14
Fostering Alphabet Knowledge Development: A Comparison of Two Instructional Approaches.
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15
Writing Quality in Chinese Children: Speed and Fluency Matter.
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