

Dr. Mel Levine
Writing is a code. Deciphering the written code is a universal goal, a daunting
challenge all children face. For some, regrettably, the effort is frustrating
and, at times, seemingly futile.
Children's reading abilities depend upon many different factors and influences.
During their preschool years, future readers develop an interest in books, a fascination
with letters and words, and the ideas they convey on paper. This spark can be
ignited when children are read to often during the years leading up to their formal
education. At the same time, preschoolers acquire an appreciation of the sounds
that make up words in our language. They come to realize that words are composed
of combinations of these individual language sounds (called phonemes), and that
words can be broken down into their basic sounds and put back together again (a
realization known as phonemic awareness).
Breaking the Code
Fascination with the code combined with an appreciation of the appearance
of letters and strong processing of the language sounds enable kids to pronounce,
identify and understand words on paper. That aspect of reading is called decoding.
Some children experience delays in mastering decoding. In many cases, these
are kids who are having problems with phonological or phonemic awareness; either
they cannot process language sounds with sufficient speed and accuracy, or they
have trouble perceiving that words are composed of sound units. Other children
have trouble recognizing the visual patterns of symbols and whole words. They
too endure delays in early reading. Trouble with phonemes or difficulty with
visual patterns can make it hard for a child to associate sounds with combinations
of letter symbols (the so-called graphemes). Learning to read becomes an arduous
and often unsuccessful ordeal.
Decoding Difficulty: Impact on Comprehension
Over time students develop an ever-increasing number of words they
can identify instantly and effortlessly; these automatic words comprise a child's
sight vocabulary. Students with word decoding problems may fall seriously behind
in accumulating a sight vocabulary. Their reading suffers, and sometimes they
expend so much effort decoding individual words that they have little or no
energy left to figure out the meaning of whole sentences and paragraphs. In
this way, poor decoding can take its toll on reading comprehension, a very common
phenomenon among middle school children.
Getting the Message
Reading comprehension also depends upon overall language ability. To
understand what they read kids first must be able to understand what they hear.
They need to be effective with word meaning and the interpretation of increasingly
complex sentences and texts. Poor oral comprehension is a common source of delays
in reading comprehension, especially as kids get older and their texts contain
harder and harder language.
Reading and Memory
Memory plays a significant role in reading. In addition to remembering
the sounds, symbols, and words in one's sight vocabulary, students need to recall
what they already know in order to interpret the new material in a book. They
must use active memory, the capacity to suspend several things in the mind simultaneously,
to retain what they are reading while they are reading. They must also remember
what they read at the top of the page while proceeding through subsequent paragraphs.
And, they must remember particular concepts, ideas, and information from their
reading, so they can apply them later.
Some students literally forget what they're reading as they read. The arrive
at the end of a page or chapter and have little or no idea of what they've just
read. They are "leaky readers."
Reading and Attention
Good reading also requires strong attention. Children with attention
deficits may focus on the wrong aspects of the text. Or they might not focus
at all, thereby missing important information during reading. They may superimpose
their own meaning over what the author intended (so-called "top-down reading").
Reading the Difficulty with Reading
To help kids with reading problems, it is essential to identify
where the breakdown is occurring in the reading process. Is the child having
a decoding problem? If so, is there an auditory or a visual problem, or both?
Is comprehension a problem? If so, is this the result of poor decoding, or weaknesses
in semantics or other aspects of language ability? How well is the child using
memory during reading? Are weak attention abilities interfering?
There are many curricular methods, techniques, and other interventions to help
kids with reading problems. Often these approaches make use of intense drill
and multi-sensory channels of input. Pinpointing where child's reading breakdowns
are occurring will help determine which kinds of treatment are likely to be
successful. With skillful help, all kids can become readers.
Read
ways to help students master the Challenges of Reading
Explore the Reading section of the Parent Toolkit
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