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Behavioral and brain evidence for language by ear, mouth, eye, and hand and motor skills in literacy learning
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Movement Issues Identified in Movement ABC2 Checklist Parent Ratings for Students with Persisting Dysgraphia, Dyslexia, and OWL LD and Typical Literacy Learners
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Effective Instruction for Persisting Dyslexia in Upper Grades: Adding Hope Stories and Computer Coding to Explicit Literacy Instruction
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Self-government of complex reading and writing brains informed by cingulo-opercular network for adaptive control and working memory components for language learning
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Sequential Prediction of Literacy Achievement for Specific Learning Disabilities Contrasting in Impaired Levels of Language in Grades 4 to 9
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Brain and Behavioral Assessment of Executive Functions for Self-Regulating Levels of Language in Reading Brain
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Relationships of French and English Morphophonemic Orthographies to Word Reading, Spelling, and Reading Comprehension During Early and Middle Childhood
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In: ISSN: 0829-5735 ; Canadian Journal of School Psychology ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03160752 ; Canadian Journal of School Psychology, SAGE Publications, 2016, 31 (4), pp.305-321. ⟨10.1177/0829573516640336⟩ (2016)
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Relationships of Attention and Executive Functions to Oral Language, Reading, and Writing Skills and Systems in Middle Childhood and Early Adolescence
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Evidence-Based Reading and Writing Assessment for Dyslexia in Adolescents and Young Adults
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Effective Beginning Handwriting Instruction: Multi-modal, Consistent Format for 2 Years, and Linked to Spelling and Composing
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Relationships between Language Input and Letter Output Modes in Writing Notes and Summaries for Students in Grades 4 to 9 with Persisting Writing Disabilities
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Thompson, Robert; Tanimoto, Steven; Abbott, Robert; Nielsen, Kathleen; Lyman, Ruby Dawn; Geselowitz, Kira; Habermann, Katrien; Mickail, Terry; Raskind, Marshall; Peverly, Stephen; Nagy, William; Berninger, Virginia. - 2016
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Abstract:
This study in programmatic research on technology-supported instruction first identified, through pretesting using evidence-based criteria, students with persisting specific learning disabilities (SLDs) in written language during middle childhood (grades 4-6) and early adolescence (grades 7-9). Participants then completed computerized writing instruction and posttesting. The 12 computer lessons varied output modes (letter production by stylus alternating with hunt and peck keyboarding versus by pencil with grooves alternating with touch typing on keyboard), input (read or heard source material), and task (notes or summaries). Posttesting and coded notes and summaries showed the effectiveness of computerized writing instruction on both writing tasks for multiple modes of language input and letter production output for improving letter production and related writing skills.
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Keyword:
Article
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URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27434553 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5291827/ https://doi.org/10.1080/10400435.2016.1199066
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Relationships between Presence or Absence of ADHD and fMRI Connectivity Writing Tasks in Children with Dysgraphia
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Modes of Alphabet Letter Production during Middle Childhood and Adolescence: Interrelationships with Each Other and Other Writing Skills
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Predicting Levels of Reading and Writing Achievement in Typically Developing, English-Speaking 2nd and 5th Graders
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Levels of Phonology Related to Reading and Writing in Middle Childhood
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Differences between Children with Dyslexia Who Are and Are Not Gifted in Verbal Reasoning
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Are Attitudes Toward Writing and Reading Separable Constructs? A Study With Primary Grade Children
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