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literacy & dyslexia

Reading Instruction and Intervention

Unlike language and vision, literacy does not come naturally. There is no genetic program for its development. Rather, all learners must be taught to read and write.

Knowledgeable and skilled teachers of reading understand both what to teach and how to teach it. The content of effective reading instruction is comprehensive and includes:

The acronym POSSUM helps teachers remember that all of these elements are foundational skills that need to be connected in the early reading circuit.

Structured literacy approaches deliver this content explicitly and systematically with targeted feedback.

Our group has been conducting research on intervention for two decades, along with colleagues Robin Morris and Maureen Lovett. Our randomized control treatment studies, which were funded by NICHD, indicate two critical findings for intervention:

Our new study, funded by the Office of Special Education Programs, is investigating whether early screening data can be used as the basis for differential intervention that targets the strengths and weaknesses of individual children. The importance of early assessment and early multi-component intervention is key to ameliorating the so-called “dyslexia paradox,” where diagnosis only comes in later grades despite the evidence that early intervention works best.