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Delivering language intervention at scale : promises and pitfalls
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Computerised speechreading training for deaf children: A randomised controlled trial
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Improving storytelling and vocabulary in secondary school students with language disorder: a randomized controlled trial
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Developmental Outcomes for Children at High Risk of Dyslexia and Children With Developmental Language Disorder
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Dyslexia and Developmental Language Disorder: comorbid disorders with distinct effects on reading comprehension
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Stage 2 Registered Report: There is no appreciable relationship between strength of hand preference and language ability in 6- to 7-year-old children
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Learning correspondences between magnitudes, symbols and words: evidence for a triple code model of arithmetic development
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Developmental outcomes for children at high risk of dyslexia and children with developmental language disorder
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Abstract:
We followed children at family risk of dyslexia and children with preschool language difficulties from age 3½, comparing them with controls (N = 234). At age 8, children were classified as having dyslexia or Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) and compared at earlier time points with controls. Children with dyslexia have specific difficulties with phonology and emergent reading skills in the preschool period, whereas children with DLD, with or without dyslexia, show a wider range of impairments including significant problems with executive and motor tasks. For children with both dyslexia and DLD, difficulties with phonology are generally more severe than those observed in children with dyslexia or DLD alone. Findings confirm that poor phonology is the major cognitive risk factor for dyslexia.
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Keyword:
at-risk; developmental language disorder; dyslexia
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1111/cdev.13216
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A longitudinal study of early reading development: Letter-sound knowledge, phoneme awareness and RAN, but not letter-sound integration, predict variations in reading development
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Longitudinal relationships between speech perception, phonological skills and reading in children at high-risk of dyslexia
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Longitudinal relationships between speech perception, phonological skills and reading in children at high‐risk of dyslexia
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Effectiveness of a small‐group vocabulary intervention programme: evidence from a regression discontinuity design
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Learning to read in Chinese: Evidence for reciprocal relationships between word reading and oral language skills
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Oral Language Skills Intervention in Pre-school – A Cautionary Tale
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Eye movements during visual speech perception in deaf and hearing children
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Training mispronunciation correction and word meanings improves children’s ability to learn to read words
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Automatic activation of sounds by letters occurs early in development but is not impaired in children with dyslexia
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The home literacy environment is a correlate, but perhaps not a cause, of variations in children’s language and literacy development
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Early literacy and comprehension skills in children learning English as an additional language and monolingual children with language weaknesses
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In: Reading and Writing , 30 (4) pp. 771-790. (2017) (2017)
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20 |
The development of executive function and language skills in the early school years
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