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Thinking Readers Part II: Supporting Beginning Reading in Children with Cognitive Disabilities through Technology
by Lucinda M. O'Neill and Bridget Dalton, Ed.D.
Eleven-year-old Becky is totally absorbed in the electronic picture book on
her computer screen, a digital retelling of the classic folk tale, The Gingerbread
Boy. Using brightly colored illustrations and simple text, The Gingerbread Boy
tells the story of a gingerbread cookie that escapes from the oven and has a
series of encounters with animals who want to eat him. Becky, who has Williams
Syndrome, a genetic disorder that causes physical problems and developmental
delays, has reached the part in the story where the gingerbread boy tries to
cross a river by hitching a ride on the back of the wily fox.
Later, a learning prompt embedded in the digital picture book asks Becky to
describe her favorite part of the story, either by typing her response in a
text box or recording her response orally. "My favorite part of the story
is when the fox ate the gingerbread boy," she says. "Do you want to
type that?" Peggy asks. "No, I want to record it," she responds
decidedly. Becky records her response three times before she is satisfied, smiling
and clapping her hands at her accomplishment.
Raising expectations
It is an unfortunate truth that many children with severe cognitive disabilities
have not had the opportunity to fully realize their potential because of low
expectations for their development in the area of literacy. With conventional
approaches to teaching reading, children with such disabilities often are not
able to learn to read at a functional literacy level. Traditionally, literacy
instruction for these children has focused on drill and practice; however, recent
research by Koppenhaver and Erickson and their colleagues at the Center for
Literacy and Disabilities Studies suggests that these students benefit from
the same research-based instructional approaches that work for other students
who are learning to read. That is, reading instruction that:
- Focuses on reading for meaning,
- Provides direct instruction in reading skills such as phonics and decoding
(word recognition), and
- Offers children a wide choice of appealing literature.
Becky is one of seven children with cognitive disabilities who are involved
in CAST's Thinking Reader Project. Funded in part by the Joseph P. Kennedy,
Jr., Foundation, the project draws on a well-established research base in how
children learnto read as well as a new educational approach pioneered by CAST
called Universal Design for Learning, which weds current research in how the
brain learns with the flexibility of multimedia computer technology. The project
is creating digital versions of popular children's stories that include a variety
of built-in supports for the development of beginning reading skills in children
with cognitive disabilities. "The project is about expanding possibilities
and raising expectations for the literacy development of these children,"
says David Rose, CAST's co-executive director.
A powerful teaching tool
Unlike traditional print books, digital text has the flexibility to change in
relation to the instructional goal and the individual learner's characteristics.
The Thinking Reader picture books provide three instructional foci: comprehension
strategies, story grammar, and decoding.
In the opening scenario, the instructional goal was comprehension and Becky's
attention was focused on making sense of the story. Decoding was not an issue,
since she could click on the text to have it read aloud. On another day, the
instructional goal might be word recognition. When working on oral reading,
Becky clicks on the decoding supports to help her sound out the words and practices
reading aloud into the computer microphone. She records and listens to herself
read, engaging in repeated readings that help her build her word recognition
skills. On yet another day, Becky learns about character and plot as she responds
to story grammar prompts. The Thinking Reader's flexibility in enabling teachers
to set the goal of a learning activity increases Becky's opportunities for success
and keeps her engaged in the targeted learning task for extended periods.
While it is possible for children to read electronic storybooks by themselves
after some initial training, the Thinking Reader is designed to support an instructional
dialogue between the child and a teacher or instructional aide. Students are
put in charge of the computer mouse and choose many of the activities they want
to pursue within the program. The teacher plays a key role, guiding students
in responding to the learning prompts embedded in the stories. "It allows
the teacher to have a conversation with the child about the text, moving beyond
a rote response to the story or an over-reliance on yes and no responses,"
says Ron MacAdow, an instructional designer and manager of the Thinking Reader
Project.
For example, asking students to retell a story in their own words is an exercise
that contributes to both comprehension and the development of verbal skills.
Erica, a student with cognitive disabilities for whom English is a second language,
retells the story sequence in which the fox eats the gingerbread boy. "The
fox say hop on my back, my tail is soaking wet," Erica relates. Moving
to the next screen, where the fox is shown sitting alone in the grass licking
his chops, she laughs out loud. Next, she clicks on the picture and hears the
fox say, "Mmm, mmm, I love to eat gingerbread cookies," confirming
her guess about the fate that has befallen the gingerbread boy. "At the
end, he (the gingerbread boy) didn't listen again, all the time the cookie didn't
listen. He doesn't have a brain," Erica concludes, laughing again.
A promising beginning
By providing children with cognitive disabilities with supports that enable
them to make progress in all aspects of language and literacy development-reading,
writing, listening, and speaking-CAST believes that the Thinking Reader and
similar programs can help these children take critical steps towards independence.
Teachers report that they see their students actively reading and responding
to the digital picture books in ways they haven't seen before in traditional
reading instruction. "I think it's wonderful," one teacher says, citing
the levels of support the program offers and the opportunities for children
to "take charge of their learning" as specific strengths of the approach.
"Children have definite ideas about what they liked about their work,"
she observes, commenting on how the program offers students the opportunity
to listen to their own voices and review their progress. Another teacher commented
that the program promotes students' oral language, noting that she observed
one child talk more in a single session reading on the computer than she had
in the previous five weeks of class.
Parents are also eager to see tools like this more available in classrooms.
"I think it's been very positive," Becky's mom says of Becky's involvement
in the program. "Her reading is taking off. Before, I thought her reading
was more sight words or from memory, and now we can be out on the street and
I'll say, 'What does that say?' and she can tell me."
CAST's current work with children with cognitive disabilities builds on a three-year
study the organization conducted with a different group of "Thinking Readers"-middle
school students with learning disabilities (Exceptional Parent, June 2001).
In this U.S. Department of Education-funded study, CAST researchers evaluated
the Thinking Reader approach with l02 students, most with learning disabilities
and all performing below the 25th percentile in reading. The study demonstrated
that students who used supported, digital versions of age-appropriate novels
had greater comprehension gains on a standardized reading test than did a control
group of students who did not use computer supports. The students who used computer-based
supports also showed higher levels of engagement when interacting with the material
and improved "on task" behavior.
Future directions
There is a growing body of research demonstrating the positive impact of computer-supported
reading instruction and electronic picture books on students' literacy development.
CAST believes that supported digital learning environments are the future of
educational technology, and that designing effective learning environments for
those students with more severe learning needs will result in more effective
learning for all.
Lucinda M. O'Neill is a staff writer at CAST, the not-for-profit Center
for Applied Special Technology in Peabody, MA. Bridget Dalton, Ed.D., is Chief
Education Officer of CAST.
Page updated September 17, 2002

© 1999-2009 CAST,
40 Harvard Mills Square, Foundry Street,
Wakefield, MA 01880-3233,
USA.
Telephone: +1 (781) 245-2212
Email:
cast@cast.org
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