Identify research regarding literacy-based intervention, design literacy-based intervention to address a variety of goals, and create a literacy-based intervention kit
Literacy Based Intervention: From Theory to Practice
1.
2. Why use literacy-based intervention?
Hybrid approach that works across
ages, grades, disorders, languages and cultures
3. Studies that look at literacy-based
intervention and other successful
intervention techniques
4. Development
• “Children develop oral and written phonological
abilities as a natural consequence of their
communicative interactions with adules,
including storybook readings (p. 133 Jonathan)
• Shared reading activities increase development
in multiple areas (Doyle & Bramwell, 2006;
Debaryshe, 1993; Burner, 1978)
• Shared reading activities promote language
development in children with typical
development (Teale & Sulzby, 1986; Westby,
1985) and with language impairments (Gillam &
5. Relation to Literacy Development
• Reading to students promotes greater desire to
read (Mason & Blanton, 1971)
• Reading to students exposes them to printed
materials
• Students are exposed to positive reading role
models
• Students are more prepared to learn from
classroom lesson that use literacy tools
6. Zone of Proximal Development
(Vygotsky, 1978)
• ZPD is a range of skill level for each student
• The bottom of the range is what the student is
able to do independently
• The top of the range is what the student can do
with maximal assistance
• As the student learns, their ZPD moves to higher
levels
12. Cumulative not Comparative
Language and Content of Intervention
Select based on what is appropriate in each language and
what is appropriate for child’s and family’s situation.
e.g.
Spanish
•Gender
•Verbs
•Article+nouns
•Food
•Clothing
•Household items
Both
•People
•Functions
•Categorization
•Part-Whole
English
•Pronouns
•Prepositions
•Nouns
•Colors
•Numbers
•Shapes
Peña & Kester, 2004
13. Early Language Milestones
Language Milestones English Spanish
using gestures 9‐12mo 9‐12 mo
following simple
commands
12‐15mo 12‐15mo
symbolic play 18mo 18mo
episodic play 36mo 36mo
recognizes familiar
objects when named
7‐12mo 7‐12mo
Click here to download this chart as a pdf.
14. Toddler Language Skills
Language Milestones English Spanish
combine 2 words 1‐2yrs 1‐2yrs
point to named items in
book/picture
1‐2yrs 1‐2yrs
combine 2‐3 words 2‐3yr 2‐3yr
follow 2‐step directive 2‐3yr 2‐3 yr
present progressive verb
form
2‐3yr 2‐3yr
plural use 2‐3yr 2‐3yr
Click here to download this chart as a pdf.
15. Preschool Language Skills
Language Milestones English Spanish
possessives 3‐4yr 3‐4yr
negatives 3‐4 yr 3‐4 yr
answer simple WH?s 3‐4yr 3‐4yr
combine 4+ words 3‐4yr 3‐4yr
tells story related to topic 4‐5yr 4‐5yr
use of adjective and
descriptors in sentences
4‐5yr 4‐5yr
Click here to download this chart as a pdf.
16. School-Age Language Skills
Language Milestones English Spanish
tell and re‐tell stories in a
logical order using
complete sentences
6‐7yr 6‐7yr
uses more complex
sentence structures
7‐8yr 7‐8yr
when not understood can
re‐clarify and explain
their ideas
7‐8yr 7‐8yr
Click here to download this chart as a pdf.
17. English Elicited Narrative Sample Frog, Where Are You?
( )=maze/revision, X = unintelligible
The kid (is) buy a frog and the
dog see the frog.
Now the frog and the boy fell
asleep, was sleepy.
And the frog go away. [verb
error]
(And the) and the kid and the
dog gray up.
And the old one wasn’t there.
And the frog is no more allí, not
there.
(And the, and the) and the kid
[said], “Where are you, frog?
Koook!
(And the) and the dog pull a
bucket, house, dog.
And a dog fall in the window.
And the kid was bad for the
dog.
And the kid say woooo.
And some bees come.
And the dog smell the bees.
(And the) and the kid say,
“kooook.”
And there was the dog.
And the dog was catching the
house bees.
LANGUAGE CASE STUDY
18. English Elicited Narrative Sample Frog, Where Are You?
( )=maze/revision, X = unintelligible
And there [was] there was a
squirt
And the do g catching the bees’
house.
And the bees’ house fall.
And the, and he, the kid check in
the tree.
And he, it was (a) a cole (eagle?).
And the kid fall.
And the bee follow the dog.
And the dog was running fast.
And the eagle put, and the eagle hit
the kid.
(And the kid say, “kooook.”
And then come a deer.
(And the deer) and the deer
walk.
And the dog was following him.
And the dog and the kid fall in
the water.
And the kid then said there
under the water.
And the dog and the kid fall in
the water and he said he hears
a log in the log.
It was a frog.
And the and the and the kid say,
“Shhhh.”
LANGUAGE CASE STUDY
21. Developmentally appropriate
activities are consistent with the
way children acquire language
knowledge
• Accommodation & Assimilation
• Semantic Network Connections
• Word Association and Concept Mediation
22. Vocabulary and Cognitive
Equilibrium
• When we are introduced to
new vocabulary, we need to
▫ Assimilate it into a category OR
▫ Accommodate by creating a
new category
• The FACT approach facilitates
this process
Piaget, 1972
23. Semantic Network Model Collins & Quillian, 1969
• Interlinked concept nodes
• Activation of semantic
information during online
Processing
• Spreading activation =
Information retrieval
24. The Rippling Effect Nevid, 2009
• Semantic activation is strong
where connections are strong
and gradually gets weaker.
• Intervention is designed to
strengthen the Rippling Effect.
25. Selecting Intervention Activities
• Great Therapy Materials Should:
▫ provide repetitive structure
▫ be able to be used with all ages and cultures
▫ address goals across semantics, syntax,
comprehension, pragmatics, and discourse
▫ decrease preparation time
▫ be fun and interesting for students
▫ make homework programs more relevant for parents
▫ allow for programmatic collection of intervention data
▫ apply to academic needs
26. Literacy-based Intervention FACT Vocabulary Building
• Pre-Reading Activities
• Reading Activities
• Post-Reading Activities
• Building the narrative
structure that is integral to
communicating events and
answering questions.
• Function
• Attribute
• Category
• Therapy
• Building the linguistic
structure that allows new
words to be learned, accessed,
and remembered.
27. Book Selection
• Age-appropriate
• Interesting and
relevant
• Related to goals
• Simple
• Good illustrations
• Resources
▫ School librarians
▫ Classroom teachers
▫ Internet
28. Pre-Reading Activities
Pre-reading activities are used to bridge any gaps
between a student’s current skills and the targeted
skills.
• Music – use songs semantically related to the
material in the book. (Hoggan & Strong, 1994)
• Semantic mapping/graphic organizers – the adult
and students develop a list of words and concepts
related to the story and then develop a visual
representation or map of how the words and
concepts are related to one another (Gillam &
Ukrainetz, 2006; Hoggan & Strong, 1994).
29. Pre-Reading Activities
• Illustration discussion – The student creates a
story using illustrations from the selected
book. Scaffolding techniques may be used to
facilitate higher semantic and syntactic
complexity. Several templates that can be
used during this activity are included.
• Pre-reading discussion – Pre-reading
questions are designed to tie the students’
knowledge and ideas from the graphic
organizer to the concepts in the book.
30. Reading Activities
While reading the book, use scaffolding techniques to
engage the student and check understanding.
Clinicians commonly use scaffolding techniques in
order to help the student learn target skills.
Scaffolding techniques
• Print reference – The adult references a target from
the book by pointing or commenting (e.g. The adult
points to an illustration and asks, “What is happening
in the picture?”)
• Cloze procedures – The adult provides the first part of
an utterance and the student completes the thought
(e.g. A: The mouse lost his balance and ______ S:
fell off).
31. Reading Activities
Scaffolding techniques
• Syntactic and semantic expansions – The adult
expands on an utterance provided by the student using
the grammar and vocabulary targets (e.g. S: The
mouse walking. A: Yes, the little mouse is walking on
the vine.).
• Binary choice – The adult offers the student two
choices of responses (e.g. A: What happened to the
mouse? Did he fall off or jump off the vine? S: He fell
off the vine.).
• Modeling – The adult models the target structure for
the student (e.g. What happened to the mouse when
he was crossing the river? The mouse fell into the
river.) (Liboiron & Soto, 2006).
32. Post-Reading Activities
• Post-reading activities create a time when the student
can review and reflect on what they have learned. For
students with language impairments, post-reading
activities are a powerful way to allow the student to
experience success that they may not often feel in the
classroom. Here are general post-reading activities.
• Discussion questions – The adult and student discuss
the story. According to Gillam and Ukrainetz (2006),
the clinician should respond to 40% to 60% of all
questions with scaffolding techniques.
• Syntactic activities – Students create grammatical
structures through a variety of art activities and
games. Suggested targets: past tense and present
progressive
33. Post-Reading Activities
• Semantic activities – Students add to their word
books through art activities in the areas of
object/function, part/whole, categories,
antonyms, and synonyms. Suggested targets:
comparison, categories, and action words.
• Narrative retelling – use scaffolding techniques
and visuals from the book to support the student
while retelling the story.
• Phonology/Articulation – Use images from the
book as well as general images in order to target
specific phonological and articulation skills. See
articulation chart in the following activities.
34. Graphic organizer - ex.
Bear on a Bike
• Say: “We are going to read about a bear who goes
on an adventure. On his adventure, he uses
different types of transportation.”
• Ask:
▫ What are ways we get from one place to another?
▫ How do you get to school?
▫ How do others get to school?
▫ What do you use to travel in your neighborhood?
▫ What do you use to travel in the water?
38. Take Away Points for
Storybook Intervention
• Language of intervention should mirror the
child’s environment
• Initial therapy targets should be elements that
exist in both language
• Let the child and the classroom guide the topics
• Use the same book across multiple groups to
save planning time
39. Function, Attribute, Category Therapy
• What is important to academics?
▫ Low vocabulary is often cited in referrals
▫ Vocabulary is heavily weighted in academic testing
▫ Vocabulary is heavily weighted in LD testing.
• Do we teach vocabulary?
• How does vocabulary relate to us?
• The answer is that we teach the structure that
allows vocabulary to be acquired
40. ( ) TEST – choose a field
of 20 items from one
category and ask the
child to name them.
TEACH – the items
that were not named
RE-TEST – all 20
items
41. FACT: How do I choose a category?
Choose a category that relates to the
student, to the classroom, AND to the
home.
• Animals
• Body Parts
• Household Objects
• Clothes
• Transportation
• Instruments
• Food
You can choose
subcategories
but wait until the
process is
learned.
Transportation:
-Air
-Land
-Water
45. FACT: Teach Unknown
• Teaching of Vocabulary Acquisition is:
▫ Systematic
The same process for each category group
We are not teaching specific vocabulary!
We are teaching the structure that allows
them to learn, organize retain, and retrieve
vocabulary!
▫ Multimodal
1.Description (utterance expansion)
2.Compare and Contrast
3.Video/Audio
4.Storybook on Topic
5.In Context
54. Take Away Points for Functional,
Attribute, Category Therapy
• Don’t make any assumptions of prior knowledge
• Do not teach vocabulary, teach structure
• Use classroom topics and areas of interest
• Use the mode (video) that the student likes best
as a reward.