Usefulness content found at American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
Highlighting ASHALanguage Domains Primarily Affected
Phonology, Morphology, Syntax, Semantics, & Pragmatics
Reading, and Word Recognition (Semantic & Phonology)Description of Disorder
- Sometimes referred to as Dyslexia
- Difficulty exists despite adequate instruction and absence of intellectual, sensory, or neurological difficulties
- Difficulty with accurate and/or fluent word recognition difficulties with accurate and/or fluent word recognition
- Poor spelling
- Language comprehension relatively intact
- Alphabet/letter knowledge
- Phonological awareness (rhyming, segmenting and blending, awareness of sounds and syllables in words)
- Sound-symbol correspondence
- Sight word knowledge
- Reading decoding
- Reading fluency
- Spelling
- Vocabulary
Description of Disorder
Speech-Language Pathologists
Students
Faculty
- Sometimes referred to as Specific Comprehension Deficit or Hyperlexia
- Inadequate reading comprehension
- Adequate or advanced word recognition skills
- Adequate reading fluency
- May have social, cognitive, or linguistic deficits
- Differentiate hyperlexia from precocious reading, the presence of advanced word recognition and advanced reading comprehension skills in typically developing children
- Print awareness
- Knowledge of basic story structure and story components
- Vocabulary knowledge (including multiple-meaning words; synonyms and antonyms)
- Understanding meaning from context
- Figurative language and ambiguities (e.g., multiple meaning words and ambiguous sentence structures) in text
- Paraphrasing and summarizing
- Making inferences
- Knowledge of different text structures and genres
- Use of strategies to facilitate comprehension (e.g., skimming, rereading, taking notes)
- Using strategies to self-monitor comprehension
- May need to address spoken language difficulties
Writing, and Writing Process (Semantics, & Pragmatics)
Description of Disorder
- Sometimes referred to as Dysgraphia
- Dysgraphia is a term used for problems with transcription; it can occur alone but often accompanies dyslexia and may occur with other learning disabilities
- Dysgraphia encompasses both motoric and linguistic-cognitive aspects of writing; linguistic-cognitive aspects are involved in the writing process and the writing product
- Pattern of difficulty in letter formation, sequencing, and spelling
- Difficulty may be secondary to issues with letter formation, sequencing, and spelling
- Dysgraphia, as it relates to the writing process, involves difficulty planning, drafting, reflecting on, revising, and editing one's writing
- Poor discourse planning and organization
- Using pictures to tell stories
- Writing for different purposes (e.g., entertain, persuade, inform)
- Writing for different audiences
- Planning (e.g., brainstorming; use of story maps; webbing)
- Drafting (e.g., referring to story maps, webs, planning notes)
- Using digital technologies (e.g., internet) to gather information for writing
- Revising and editing content
- Spelling
Description of Disorder
- Sometimes referred to as Dysgraphia
- Dysgraphia, as it relates to the writing product involves
- Difficulty organizing and adequately expressing thoughts in writing
- Difficulty constructing grammatically correct sentences of varying types and difficulty using writing conventions (e.g., capitalization and punctuation)
- Limited written fluency
- Syntactic formulation problems (complexity and correctness impacted)
- Word choice limitations (in variety and appropriateness)
- Numerous words spelled incorrectly
Focus of Assessment/Treatment
- Pretend Writing
- Writing letters of the alphabet
- Printing first and last name
- Labeling pictures
- Producing text via handwriting and/or keyboarding
- Copying text
- Writing from dictation
- Writing a variety of grammatically correct sentence types
- Judging correctness of grammar and morphology and correcting errors
- Writing cohesively (e.g., including detail, linking ideas, elaborating)
- Using conventions of writing correctly (e.g., capitalization and punctuation)
- Knowledge of different text structures and genres
Spelling, and Can Affect Both Reading and Writing (Phonology, Morphology)
Description of Disorder
- Sometimes referred to as Dysorthography
- Difficulty with the encoding of phonological information; this is a particular area of weakness for most individuals with dyslexia
- Impaired ability to represent the phonological structure of regularly spelled words
- Difficulty remembering and reproducing the patterns of irregularly spelled words
- Lack of morphemic awareness in spelling
- Difficulty spelling words (and inflecting them correctly) in sentence contexts
- Using letter-sound knowledge to spell words as they sound
- Understanding phonological, morphological, and orthographic aspects of regular and irregular spellings
- Correcting spelling errors
Spoking and Can Affect Both Reading and Writing (Phonology, Morphology, Syntax, Semantics, & Pragmatics)
Description of Disorder
- May be referred to as Oral and Written Language Learning Disability
- Oral written language disorders involve problems of similar severity that cross multiple systems.
- Marked difficulty with oral language may result in difficulty pronouncing complex words and problems with reading decoding, spelling, and language comprehension
Focus of Assessment/Treatment
- Address areas of difficulty in reading, writing, and spelling as indicated above depending upon the constellation of difficulties.
- Treatment should match the degree to which sound/word structure knowledge and sentence/discourse level knowledge are impaired across spoken and written modalities—listening, speaking, reading, and writing
INFORMATION FOR
AudiologistsSpeech-Language Pathologists
Students
Faculty
From this source, and is thier credits:
Al Otaiba, S., Puranik, C. S., Zilkowski, R. A., & Curran, T. (2009). Effectiveness of early phonological awareness interventions for students with speech or language impairments. The Journal of Special Education, 43, 107-128.
Source ASHA organization
Source ASHA organization
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