1 / 22

MidYIS Reading Test: Assessment of Phonological & Phonic Abilities

MidYIS Reading Test: Assessment of Phonological & Phonic Abilities. Bernardine King. Summary. Dyslexia – what is it? Theoretical rationale behind the test sections. What will the results look like? Limitations of test – what can it be used for?. Purpose of Test.

efrat
Download Presentation

MidYIS Reading Test: Assessment of Phonological & Phonic Abilities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MidYIS Reading Test:Assessment of Phonological & Phonic Abilities Bernardine King

  2. Summary • Dyslexia – what is it? • Theoretical rationale behind the test sections. • What will the results look like? • Limitations of test – what can it be used for?

  3. Purpose of Test Part of a new reading test for MidYIS intended to assess various levels of literacy ability: • Phonological & phonic skills. Providing information useful in deciding who may need specialist assessment for dyslexia, etc. • Vocabulary – picture and sound. • Comprehension - component skills, e.g. inference making.

  4. Rose Report, June 2009 What is Dyslexia? The review’s working definition: • A learning difficulty that primarily affects the skills involved in accurate and fluent word reading and spelling.

  5. What is Dyslexia? 2. Characteristic difficulties in: • phonological awareness • verbal memory • verbal processing speed.

  6. What is Dyslexia? 3.Occurs across the range of intellectual abilities. 4. A continuum, not a distinct category. 5. No clear cut-off points.

  7. Ehri’s phases of Reading Development Letter-sound links: Increasing alphabetic skill Consolidated All links including exception spellings Full alphabetic All regular spellings Partialalphabetic Some =‘partial’ Pre-alphabetic None, iconicreading: eg m in mcDonalds

  8. Partial Alphabetic Phase • Letter confusions, b/d, p/q/ • Nonword reading problems: • ‘pib’ ‘dalop’ • Salient lettersof words attended to, eg 1st & last letters

  9. Rationale Behind the Test Sections • Test phonological and phonic skills. • Phonology- word sounds. • Phonological processing deficit in dyslexia. • Phonic problems – relating graphemes (letters & letter groups) to the corresponding sounds (phonemes).

  10. Tests of Phonology- • Made-up word (nonword) reading, adaptive test. • ‘Sounds’ test – identifying sounds in words. • Phonological Short Term Memory- forward & backward digit span.

  11. Phonics • Nonword reading- relating graphemes to phonemes. • ‘Sounds’- sounds to letters, as in spelling. • Pseudohomophone test- made-up words (pseudowords) that sound like real words, e.g. phocks = fox. Also, test of phonology.

  12. Pseudohomophone Test • Pseudo = made-up word • Homophone = sounds like • Requires many visual and auditory skills: e.g. reading ‘phocks’ grapheme separation: ‘ph’ ‘o’ ‘ck’ ‘s’ grapheme-phoneme conversion: ‘ph’> /f/ ‘o’> /o/ ‘ck’ > /k/ ‘s’> /s/ Phoneme blending: /f/ /o/ /k/ /s/ Then..

  13. Pseudohomophone Test cont. • Match sound package of blended phonemes with items in known sound vocabulary. /f/ + /o/ + /k/ + /s/ = ‘fox’ Added difficulty – word search format. Visual search problems in dyslexia. Choose 5 out of 16 on each of 5 screens.

  14. Guessing • Nonword reading: 1 in 4 chance. Forced choice multiple choice. • ‘Sounds’: 1 in 4 chance. Forced choice multiple choice. • Word Search (pseudohomophones): 5 in 16 chance. Can move on without answering.

  15. Memory • Problems with phonological STM common in dyslexia. Order problems- e.g. telephone numbers. • Backward digit span –measure of working memory. • Short backward digit span often found in dyslexia.

  16. Design of Sub Tests ‘Nonword reading’ and ‘Sounds’ – adaptive, to: • match difficulty of items to student ability; • Reduce assessment load and time.

  17. Design of Sub Tests • ‘Lyrebird’ Test – an adaptation of a spoken digit span test for computer. • Lack of visual distraction- black screen with fixation spot. • Response entered on screen. • Max number of digits = 8, to reduce assessment load and time.

  18. Non-Verbal Reasoning • 22 questions • 8 minutes maximum

  19. 4 4 3

  20. Uses & Limitations of the Test • Audit of phonological abilities of a cohort. • Shows strengths & weaknesses. • Does notdiagnose dyslexia. • Cannot identify ‘recovered’ dyslexic readers. • Unlikely to identify visual / surface dyslexia. • Shows marked phonological / phonic difficulties.

More Related