This study tested the hypothesis whether older dyslexic children may obtain fewer gains on fluency and accuracy with respect to their younger peers after specific remediation. Changes in accuracy and fluency of a group of children with a diagnosis of dyslexia attending third and fourth grades were compared with those obtained by a group of children attending the sixth, seventh or eighth grade in two different treatments, one based on the Balance model (Bakker) and the second based on the automatization of syllable recognition (sublexical). Among all comparisons between the gains in accuracy and fluency obtained by the two groups, only the younger group in the sublexical treatment obtained a statistically significant gain with re...
This thesis compares the effectiveness of two reading treatment programmes, each developed to addres...
This study was aimed at predicting individual differences in text reading fluency. The basic proposa...
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to gain more insight into the linguistic characterization of dysl...
This study tested the hypothesis whether older dyslexic children may obtain fewer gains on fluency a...
Contains fulltext : 208866.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access)The goal of t...
The present study investigated responsiveness to intervention in children with an earlier versus lat...
The literacy skills of 56 school leavers from the Bishop and Edmundson (1987) cohort of preschoolers...
International audiencePhonological dyslexics (Ph-DYS) are characterized by a phonological deficit, w...
The construct of compensation was adopted as a theoretical point of reference in a follow-up study...
Recent research has demonstrated that dyslexic children suffer impairments in both phonological skil...
This paper reviews evidence in support of the phonological deficit hypothesis of dyslexia. Findings ...
This study focuses on the stability of dyslexia status from Grade 2 to Grade 8 in four groups: (a) n...
<div><p>A recent account of dyslexia assumes that a failure to develop automated letter-speech sound...
Dyslexia, the most common specific learning disability, causes difficulties with reading and spellin...
A recent account of dyslexia assumes that a failure to develop automated letter-speech sound integra...
This thesis compares the effectiveness of two reading treatment programmes, each developed to addres...
This study was aimed at predicting individual differences in text reading fluency. The basic proposa...
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to gain more insight into the linguistic characterization of dysl...
This study tested the hypothesis whether older dyslexic children may obtain fewer gains on fluency a...
Contains fulltext : 208866.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access)The goal of t...
The present study investigated responsiveness to intervention in children with an earlier versus lat...
The literacy skills of 56 school leavers from the Bishop and Edmundson (1987) cohort of preschoolers...
International audiencePhonological dyslexics (Ph-DYS) are characterized by a phonological deficit, w...
The construct of compensation was adopted as a theoretical point of reference in a follow-up study...
Recent research has demonstrated that dyslexic children suffer impairments in both phonological skil...
This paper reviews evidence in support of the phonological deficit hypothesis of dyslexia. Findings ...
This study focuses on the stability of dyslexia status from Grade 2 to Grade 8 in four groups: (a) n...
<div><p>A recent account of dyslexia assumes that a failure to develop automated letter-speech sound...
Dyslexia, the most common specific learning disability, causes difficulties with reading and spellin...
A recent account of dyslexia assumes that a failure to develop automated letter-speech sound integra...
This thesis compares the effectiveness of two reading treatment programmes, each developed to addres...
This study was aimed at predicting individual differences in text reading fluency. The basic proposa...
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to gain more insight into the linguistic characterization of dysl...