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1
Realizing Wokeness -- White Schools, White Ignorance: Toward a Racially Responsive Pedagogy
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2
Mixed Messages: School Choice and Spanish Dual Language Programs in the New York City Department of Education
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3
Equity and Higher Education: Essays on Performance-based Financial Aid, Community College Degree Completion, and Dual Enrollment
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4
Mixed Messages: School Choice and Spanish Dual Language Programs in the New York City Department of Education ...
Kim, Elisabeth H.. - : Columbia University, 2020
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5
"Langsam vermisse ich die Schule .". Schule während und nach der Corona-Pandemie
Edelstein, Benjamin Hrsg.; Fickermann, Detlef Hrsg.. - : Waxmann, 2020. : Münster, 2020. : New York, 2020. : pedocs-Dokumentenserver/DIPF, 2020
In: Münster ; New York : Waxmann 2020, 229 S. - (Die Deutsche Schule, Beiheft; 16) (2020)
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6
Making Sense of Mattering ... : A Phenomenological Study of Black Deaf College Students and Academic Success ...
Powers, Jennifer S.. - : Drexel University, 2020
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7
Impact of Please ASK on ESL Student Comprehension of the English Article System Before Proper Nouns ... : A Phenomenological Study ...
Scott, Renaldo A.. - : Drexel University, 2020
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8
Early reading correlates in language impairment (Newbury et al., 2020)
Jayne Newbury (8958647); Laura M. Justice (5058230); Hui H. Jiang (8958649); Mary Beth Schmitt (8958652). - 2020
Abstract: Purpose: This article first aimed to examine the cognitive (rapid automatized naming, phonological awareness, working memory, nonverbal cognition, and language) correlates of reading difficulty in children with language impairment (LI). Second, we considered whether noncognitive (effortful control, social competence, and behavior problems) correlates offered any explanatory value above that of cognitive factors. Third, we examined whether home environment (specifically household organization and home learning environment) would offer an additional explanatory value. Method: The sample included 165 children in kindergarten and Grade 1 who were receiving intervention for LI in public schools. Standardized measures along with parent interviews/questionnaires were administered at the end of the school year. Results: Logistic regression models indicated the noncognitive factors added discriminatory value to that of cognitive factors in predicting reading difficulties, whereas household factors did not. In the final model using all 11 predictors, prediction accuracy was 88.7% for the typical reading group and 54.2% for the reading difficulty group, with an overall accuracy of 76.4%. Only phonological awareness and working memory significantly contributed to predicting reading group membership when measured in kindergarten and Grade 1. Conclusions: For this sample of children with LI, the most important predictors of reading were cognitive. The child’s behavior and social competence improved prediction to a limited but statistically significant degree, whereas home environment did not. Overall classification was low, as only half of the children with reading difficulties were correctly predicted. Important factors differentiating good and poor emergent readers with LI were not captured in this study. Supplemental Material S1. HLE (Home Literacy Environment) items. Newbury, J., Justice, L. M., Jiang, H. H., & Schmitt, M. B. (2020). Cognitive, non cognitive, and home environment correlates of reading difficulties in primary-grade students with language impairment. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1044/2020_JSLHR-19-00363
Keyword: at risk; behavior; cognitive; Cognitive Science not elsewhere classified; competence; control; correlates; difficulty; effortful; emergent; environment; factors; Grade 1; home; impairment; interviews; kindergarten; Language; language impairment; learning; noncognitive; nonspecific language impairment; nonverbal cognition; organization; parent; phonological awareness; predicting; primary grade; problems; public school; questionnaires; rapid automatized naming; readers; reading; social; specific language impairment; students; working memory
URL: https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.12462428.v1
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