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Title: Evidence-based interventions for children


1
Evidence-based interventions for childrens
language and reading difficulties
  • Charles Hulme
  • Division of Psychology and Language Sciences
  • University College London

2
  • By the time children enter school we expect them
    to be able to listen, understand, express
    themselves and to communicate in an
    age-appropriate way

The school curriculum draws upon language skills
in the broadest sense
3
Bishop Colleagues
  • Recruited 4-year-olds with SLI and
  • followed them at 4 ½ and 5 ½ years
  • 44 (of those with normal IQ) resolved their
    language difficulties
  • Reassessed at 8 years
  • Resolved SLI gt normal reading
  • Persistent SLI gt reading difficulties mainly in
    comprehension
  • General delay (IQlt70) fared worst

4
Language Literacy Skills in Adolescence
age-norm
Stothard, Snowling, Bishop, Chipchase Kaplan
(1998)
5
GCSE Attainments School Leavers with a History of
LI
gaining A-C pass
6
Summary
  • Children with language difficulties face
    difficulty through the school years
  • A good start in literacy does not guarantee later
    success
  • Even when LI is resolved, many children carry
    risk of educational under-attainment (associated
    with literacy difficulties)

Prima Facie Evidence for Language Intervention
7
Todays Messages
  • It is possible to promoting oral language as a
    foundation for literacy and to facilitate reading
    comprehension
  • Robust evidence is available from RCTs
  • Early language interventions can be effective for
    children identified as at risk in nursery
    (pre-) school
  • Language interventions must be sustained
    questions remain about the optimum timing for
    intervention.

8
The Virtuous Circle
  • A good starting point is a causal theory
  • Provides theoretical motivation for design/
    content of intervention
  • Intervention provides test of the theory (RCT)
  • Implementation in practice
  • Influence policy

Theory
Practice
9
  • Phonological deficits cause decoding difficulties
  • Hatcher, Hulme and Ellis (1994) assigned four
    matched groups of reading-delayed 7.5-year-old
    children to one of three experimental conditions
    and to a control condition.
  • Reading alone
  • Phonology alone
  • Reading with phonology
  • Control

10
Reading Intervention
  • Hatcher et al., (2006) modified version of the
    HHE programme, for delivery by trained Teaching
    Assistants
  • RCT evaluating the progress of children selected
    in Year 1 as having reading difficulties
  • RI comprising reading and PA was effective
  • Experimental group gained 7.8 SS points in 33.3
    hours

11
Implementation of the programme in NY schools
  • Since 2004, Teaching Assistants from LA schools
    have received 4 days training and been provided
    with resources for the programme
  • The programme can support movement between a
    Reading Age of less than 5 years to 8 years.
  • Children and young people consistently make on
    average at least 8 months reading progress over
    10 weeks (Ratio Gain 3.2).

12
Language Intervention
13
Theoretical Rationale
  • Reading
  • Language
  • Reading is taught (skill)
  • Two component skills
  • Decoding accuracy and fluency
  • Reading comprehension
  • Causal theories well developed
  • Language is acquired
  • Multi-componential skill
  • Grammar, Phonology
  • Semantics Pragmatics
  • Understanding vs expressive language
  • No single cause multiple risk factors

14
Need to be pragmatic...
  • Spoken language skills required by the school age
    child
  • Listening and speaking
  • Understanding and Inferencing
  • Vocabulary knowledge
  • Vocabulary essential component of grammar
  • Lexical diversity improves speaking and listening
  • Important for reading irregular words and for
    reading comprehension

15
Intervention Programmes
  • Language
  • Phonology Reading
  • Speaking and listening
  • Vocabulary training
  • Narrative work (oral)
  • Letter-sound work
  • Segmenting and blending
  • Reading together and reading independently

Bowyer-Crane, Snowling, Duff, Fieldsend, Carroll,
Miles, Götz, Hulme (2008) Journal of Child
Psychology and Psychiatry
16
Intervention at the Foundations of Literacy
  • Suitable for children who enter school with
    poorly developed speech and language
  • 20-week programmes (PR or OL) delivered by
    teaching assistants
  • Randomised Controlled Trial
  • 4 test phases pre-intervention (t1),
    mid-intervention (t2), post-intervention (t3),
    maintenance test (t4)

17
Children who took part (N146)
Measure Mean SD
Age (mths) 410 3.33m
Picture Naming (std sc) 6.16 1.37
Vocabulary (std sc) 6.42 2.20
Word Reasoning (std sc) 7.62 2.33
Block Design (std sc) 6.86 3.13

SDQ Total Deviance Normal 61
Borderline 16.4
Abnormal 22.6
SES (Free Sch Meals n130) 24
18
Language (OL) programme
Group Session (30 minutes) Individual Session (20 minutes)
Introduction (5 minutes) Introduction (2 minutes)
New Vocabulary Multi-Sensory Learning (5 minutes) Vocabulary revision (5 minutes)
Vocabulary Reinforcement (7 minutes) Narrative task (5 minutes)
Speaking/Listening/ Inferencing (10 minutes) Listening, Speaking and Inferencing (5 minutes)
Plenary/Best Listener (3 minutes) Plenary (3 minutes)
19
Narrative Task - used for assessment and teaching
  • Ability to produce a coherent story
  • Knowledge of story structure
  • Use of grammar i.e. verb tenses etc
  • Sequencing
  • Use of connectives

http//www.blacksheeppress.co.uk/
20
  • Key Ideas
  • 1. Boy getting undressed
  • 2. Going to have a bath
  • 3. Boy in bath
  • 4. Boy playing/splashing
  • 5. Boy getting dried
  • 6. Water dripping on floor

Theres a boy. His clothes are on the floor.
The bath there. The boy is in the bath. The boy
is out of the bath. He has a towel. It is
snuggly. The boy getted dry.
21
Teaching Points
  • Story Opening
  • One day, Tom played outside and got very messy.
    His mum told him to go and have a bath.
  • Elaborate
  • So Tom ran himself a nice hot bath with his
    favourite bubble bath. While the bath was
    running Tom took off his dirty clothes.
  • Connectives
  • Then he climbed into the bath.
  • Correct Verb Use
  • Tom climbed out of the bath and got himself dry

22
Summary Components and Measures of Oral Language
Components Taught Measures Used
  • Listening
  • Vocabulary Development
  • Narrative Skills
  • Reinforcement through speaking and active
    inferencing
  • Listening Comprehension
  • Vocabulary
  • Action Picture Test (grammar)
  • Bus Story (narrative)
  • Picture sequencing

23
Relative Advantage of OL group at
post-intervention (t3)
24
Findings and Implications
  • The OL programme had beneficial effects on taught
    vocabulary and expressive grammar
  • These were maintained 5 months after the
    intervention ceased
  • Marginally significant effects on narrative
  • No effect on listening comprehension, working
    memory or generalization to standardized naming
    test
  • No obvious benefit to reading skill and no
    differential benefits after a further year

25
Intervention to Promote Reading Comprehension
The York Reading for Meaning Project  Evaluating
interventions designed to support reading
comprehension http//readingformeaning.co.uk/
26
Poor Comprehenders
  • Poor comprehender deficits in
  • Language skills beyond phonology
  • Higher level skills e.g. Inferencing
  • Executive processes at text-level process e.g.
    Monitoring, Self-Correction

27
Clarke, Hulme, Truelove Snowling (2010)
York Reading for Meaning (ReadMe) Trial
28
Programme contents and features
Oral Language Spoken Language Context Li
stening Comprehension Vocabulary Figurative
Language Narrative - spoken
Text Comprehension Written Language
Context Reading Comprehension Metacogniti
ve Strategies Inferencing from Text Narrative -
written
  • Combined
  • All eight components
  • Sessions contained both reading and listening
    comprehension
  • Opportunities for children to encounter new
    vocabulary/idioms/inferences in both written and
    spoken language.

29
Randomised Controlled Trial Design
t1
t2
t3
t4
Mid test
Post test
Screening
Pre test
Oct - April 2006 8-9 years
July 2007 9 years
Dec 2008 10-11 years
Dec-Jan 2007 9-10 years
July 2009
30
Gains in Text Comprehension (relative to control)
31
What Causes Comprehension Gains?
All intervention effects are reliable at t4
32
Vocabulary as Mediator of Outcome
COM - complete mediation OL - partial
mediation TC - no mediated effect
33
Theoretical Implications
  • Text level intervention is effective in promoting
    reading comprehension
  • Effect specific to reading (not maths) efficacy
    of text comprehension approaches
  • Oral language intervention has impact on reading
    comprehension, mediated by gains in vocabulary
  • Vocabulary deficits causal factor in poor
    comprehension (consistent Nation et al 2010)

34
Pre-school intervention?
35
  • Language4Learning project (L4L)
  • Evaluated the effectiveness of an oral language
    intervention in nursery and Reception classes
  • Delivered by trained TAs
  • Assessed the impact of supplementing language
    intervention with PA and LSK training on reading
    and writing skills
  • RCT methodology

36
Overview of L4L
37
Effect of intervention on language
0.43
0.46
1.18
0.33
0.32
0.60
1.24
0.83
0.13
38
Effect of intervention on early literacy
0.31
0.55
0.82
0.41
39
Summary Language4Learning
  • Children who enter school with poorly developed
    language can be identified in nursery classes and
    their oral language skills can be improved
    significantly
  • When early intervention includes training in PA
    and LSK, it also has a positive impact on
    emergent alphabetic skills but not on reading per
    se
  • (NB the controls were also receiving phonics
    instruction in mainstream)
  • Fricke, Bowyer-Crane, Haley, Hulme Snowling
    (submitted)

40
Nursery Language Project
  • AIM
  • To evaluate the efficacy of the pre-school
    component of the L4L programme for nursery school
    children with poor oral language skills
  • To improve childrens vocabulary, develop their
    narrative skills, encourage active listening, and
    build confidence in independent speaking

41
Nursery L4L Programme
  • The programme was developed to support 3 key
    areas
  • Listening Skills
  • Vocabulary Knowledge
  • Narrative Skills

42
Nursery L4R Participants
  • 13 nursery schools in York, UK took part in the
    project.
  • 8 children per nursery (N104, mean age 36)
    were selected based on their poor performance on
    standardised language measures.
  • Children were randomly allocated to an
    intervention or waiting control group.

Intervention group received 3 X 20 minute
sessions per week for 15 weeks (45 sessions in
total)
43
Nursery L4R Programme Delivery
  • The intervention was delivered by a teaching
    assistant (TA) selected by each school.
  • TAs received in-depth training prior to
    commencing the intervention.
  • The TAs received on-going support through regular
    tutorials and on-site observations.

44
Pre-and Post- Intervention Measures
  • Language
  • Directly taught skills
  • Intervention vocabulary naming
  • Intervention vocabulary definitions
  • Generalization
  • Expressive vocabulary
  • Sentence structure
  • Expressive Language (information grammar)
  • Listening Comprehension
  • Pre-Literacy
  • Letter-sound knowledge
  • Phonological awareness

45
Nursery Programme Results


46
Summary and Conclusions Nursery study
  • A structured oral language intervention programme
    can benefit pre-school children on measures of
    taught vocabulary (ds .66 - 1.04)
  • There was a marginally significant increase in
    listening comprehension (d .46)
  • No generalisation of gains to other measure of
    oral language or alphabetic skills.
  • Haley, Fricke, Snowling Hulme (in preparation)

47
Language Outcomes Summary
  • Nuffield OL gains in taught vocabulary,
    expressive grammar and picture sequencing.
  • Nuffield L4L gains in taught vocabulary,
    expressive vocabulary, grammar, narrative and
    listening comprehension.
  • Nursery Nuffield L4L gains in taught
    vocabulary marginal listening comprehension no
    effect on grammar

48
Conclusions
  • Children with poor language are at high-risk of
    educational failure
  • Intervention programmes targeted to improve
    language skills in at risk children are
    effective in the short-term (but we have limited
    knowledge of their longer-term impact)
  • Oral language programmes can be used to improve
    reading comprehension (and boosting vocabulary is
    particularly beneficial)

49
What we still need to know
  • How long interventions should last for
  • How to maintain the effects of the interventions
  • What is the best time for intervention
    pre-school school entry?
  • Who are these interventions best suited to?
  • What are the predictors of response to
    intervention?
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