ABSTRACT

Bringing together a wide range of research on reading disabilities, this comprehensive Handbook extends current discussion and thinking beyond a narrowly defined psychometric perspective. Emphasizing that learning to read proficiently is a long-term developmental process involving many interventions of various kinds, all keyed to individual developmental needs, it addresses traditional questions (What is the nature or causes of reading disabilities? How are reading disabilities assessed? How should reading disabilities be remediated? To what extent is remediation possible?) but from multiple or alternative perspectives.

Taking incursions into the broader research literature represented by linguistic and anthropological paradigms, as well as psychological and educational research, the volume is on the front line in exploring the relation of reading disability to learning and language, to poverty and prejudice, and to instruction and schooling.

The editors and authors are distinguished scholars with extensive research experience and publication records and numerous honors and awards from professional organizations representing the range of disciplines in the field of reading disabilities. Throughout, their contributions are contextualized within the framework of educators struggling to develop concrete instructional practices that meet the learning needs of the lowest achieving readers.

part |90 pages

Perspectives on Reading Disability

chapter |11 pages

Traditions of Diagnosis

Learning from the Past, Moving Past Traditions

chapter |9 pages

Reading Fluency

What Is It and How Should It Be Measured?

part |80 pages

Developmental Patterns of Reading Proficiency and Reading Difficulties

part |144 pages

Developmental Interventions

chapter |8 pages

Expert Classroom Instruction for Students with Reading Disabilities

Explicit, Intense, Targeted … and Flexible

chapter |6 pages

Cultural Modeling

Building on Cultural Strengths as an Alternative to Remedial Reading Approaches

chapter |11 pages

Peer Mediation

A Means of Differentiating Classroom Instruction

chapter |2 pages

Epilogue