A Phonological Awareness Intervention for at-Risk Preschoolers: The Effects of Supplemental, Intensive, Small-Group Instruction

Results from phonological awareness research on assessment and intervention support two major suppositions. First, findings from correlational studies revealing that young children's phonological sensitivity is related to the future development of reading skills (Lonigan et al., 1998) validate...

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Main Author: Guidry, Lisa Oliver
Other Authors: Jill Howard Allor
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: LSU 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-0703103-140535/
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spelling ndltd-LSU-oai-etd.lsu.edu-etd-0703103-1405352013-01-07T22:48:39Z A Phonological Awareness Intervention for at-Risk Preschoolers: The Effects of Supplemental, Intensive, Small-Group Instruction Guidry, Lisa Oliver Curriculum & Instruction Results from phonological awareness research on assessment and intervention support two major suppositions. First, findings from correlational studies revealing that young children's phonological sensitivity is related to the future development of reading skills (Lonigan et al., 1998) validate early screening of phonological awareness to identify children who may be at risk for encountering reading difficulties. Second, experimental studies examining the effectiveness of phonological awareness instruction demonstrate that young children's phonological sensitivity can be promoted, thereby altering patterns of initial weaknesses (Bentin & Leshem, 1993; O'Connor et al., 1995b; Torgesen & Davis, 1996; Warrick et al., 1993) The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of small-group instruction designed to enhance whole-class phonological awareness instruction delivered to preschoolers. Intensive small-group instruction, which supplemented phonological awareness activities conducted with large classroom groups 3 times each week, was provided biweekly to students who demonstrated waeknesses in phonological awareness on pre-treatment measures. The contrast group of low-performing students participated in the whole-class phonological awareness instruction, but received no additional small-group instruction. All students enrolled in 4 different preschool classes participated in phonological awareness instruction delivered to intact classes of 17 to 20 students. Data collected on students participating in the low-skilled treatment and contrast groups and on a sample of average- to high-skilled students, serving as an additional contrast group, were analyzed to examine the effects of supplemental, intensive, small-group phonological awareness instruction delivered to low-skilled preschoolers. The effectiveness of supplemental, intensive, small-group phonological awareness instruction for preschoolers with little awareness of the phonological structure of language was not supported by the results of this study. Analyses of post-intervention scores revealed that the experimental treatment did not promote subjects' phonological awareness to levels significantly higher than those of the low-skilled contrast students, who participated only in phonological awareness instruction delivered to the whole class. The supplemental small-group instruction also did not promote subjects' phonological awareness to levels similar to those of the average- to high-skilled contrast students. Jill Howard Allor Margaret T. Stewart Earl H. Cheek, Jr. R. Kenton Denny J. Geaghan LSU 2003-07-10 text application/pdf http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-0703103-140535/ http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-0703103-140535/ en unrestricted I hereby grant to LSU or its agents the right to archive and to make available my thesis or dissertation in whole or in part in the University Libraries in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all proprietary rights, such as patent rights. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis or dissertation.
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Curriculum & Instruction
spellingShingle Curriculum & Instruction
Guidry, Lisa Oliver
A Phonological Awareness Intervention for at-Risk Preschoolers: The Effects of Supplemental, Intensive, Small-Group Instruction
description Results from phonological awareness research on assessment and intervention support two major suppositions. First, findings from correlational studies revealing that young children's phonological sensitivity is related to the future development of reading skills (Lonigan et al., 1998) validate early screening of phonological awareness to identify children who may be at risk for encountering reading difficulties. Second, experimental studies examining the effectiveness of phonological awareness instruction demonstrate that young children's phonological sensitivity can be promoted, thereby altering patterns of initial weaknesses (Bentin & Leshem, 1993; O'Connor et al., 1995b; Torgesen & Davis, 1996; Warrick et al., 1993) The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of small-group instruction designed to enhance whole-class phonological awareness instruction delivered to preschoolers. Intensive small-group instruction, which supplemented phonological awareness activities conducted with large classroom groups 3 times each week, was provided biweekly to students who demonstrated waeknesses in phonological awareness on pre-treatment measures. The contrast group of low-performing students participated in the whole-class phonological awareness instruction, but received no additional small-group instruction. All students enrolled in 4 different preschool classes participated in phonological awareness instruction delivered to intact classes of 17 to 20 students. Data collected on students participating in the low-skilled treatment and contrast groups and on a sample of average- to high-skilled students, serving as an additional contrast group, were analyzed to examine the effects of supplemental, intensive, small-group phonological awareness instruction delivered to low-skilled preschoolers. The effectiveness of supplemental, intensive, small-group phonological awareness instruction for preschoolers with little awareness of the phonological structure of language was not supported by the results of this study. Analyses of post-intervention scores revealed that the experimental treatment did not promote subjects' phonological awareness to levels significantly higher than those of the low-skilled contrast students, who participated only in phonological awareness instruction delivered to the whole class. The supplemental small-group instruction also did not promote subjects' phonological awareness to levels similar to those of the average- to high-skilled contrast students.
author2 Jill Howard Allor
author_facet Jill Howard Allor
Guidry, Lisa Oliver
author Guidry, Lisa Oliver
author_sort Guidry, Lisa Oliver
title A Phonological Awareness Intervention for at-Risk Preschoolers: The Effects of Supplemental, Intensive, Small-Group Instruction
title_short A Phonological Awareness Intervention for at-Risk Preschoolers: The Effects of Supplemental, Intensive, Small-Group Instruction
title_full A Phonological Awareness Intervention for at-Risk Preschoolers: The Effects of Supplemental, Intensive, Small-Group Instruction
title_fullStr A Phonological Awareness Intervention for at-Risk Preschoolers: The Effects of Supplemental, Intensive, Small-Group Instruction
title_full_unstemmed A Phonological Awareness Intervention for at-Risk Preschoolers: The Effects of Supplemental, Intensive, Small-Group Instruction
title_sort phonological awareness intervention for at-risk preschoolers: the effects of supplemental, intensive, small-group instruction
publisher LSU
publishDate 2003
url http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-0703103-140535/
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