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literacy & dyslexia

Reading Development

Some of the most important contributions to reading development take place from birth to 5 years. During this critical period, children develop language, cognition, and social-emotional skills.

The Collaborative places heavy emphasis on the role that parents, pediatricians, and early childhood educators play in the development of the reading brain. For example, research shows that simply reading to children every night enhances their language development.

The cumulative research on early reading development indicates the importance of foundational skills like:

However, recent research indicates the need to:

Teaching an expanded view of foundational skills and the explicit connections between them and early comprehension skills is essential for early reading. (See “Elbow Room” brief.)

Adolescent learners who are struggling to read cannot meet the academic demands of their classes. With a long history of reading and spelling difficulties, their decoding skills are often painfully slow and effortful. The less fluent their decoding skills, the fewer number of unknown words they are exposed to. Consequently, their background knowledge, vocabulary, grammar and comprehension skills all suffer. Compounding these challenges are motivational and other social-emotional issues that contribute to an avoidable cycle of learning loss.

Our work addresses these difficulties in various ways: