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ATTENTION THERAPY IMPROVES READING BY 220%By Jim Hetherman The ability to read with automacity and comprehension is an
ability that can lead a child to successes in almost any chosen field or
endeavor. The opposite is also true: A reading disability will hold a child
back. It is no wonder that reading remediation receives such a focus in special
education programs for children with learning disabilities and in public
libraries for those who still have not learned how to read proficiently as
adults. Reading remediation usually takes the form of teaching strategies that
the child or adult can use to become better readers. MethodThe researchers randomly selected thirty students with a mild to
moderate reading disability from beginning-sixth-graders in urban schools
serving European American, Asian American, Hispanic, and African American
students. Fifteen of the thirty students were randomly selected for the
Experimental Group, and the remaining fifteen were assigned to the Control
Group. Each of the thirty students was given standardized pre-tests to determine
their attention level, and standardized pre-tests to determine their reading
level. The Experimental Group received Attention Therapy for one-hour a week for
twelve weeks, and the Control Group did not receive this therapy. Neither group
received any reading remediation during the same five-months time. At the end of
the study, each group was given the same sets of standardized attention and
reading tests in order to determine the effect that Attention Therapy had on
attention and reading. ResultsFollowing the 12 one-hour weekly sessions of attention therapy given over a five month period, the average standard attention scores of the Experimental Group improved from 95 to 113, comparable to a change from the 41st to 77th percentile. This growth in attention skills in this brief period is impressive. After completing the regimen of attention therapy, the average reading comprehension scores of the experimental group improved significantly from a grade equivalent of 4.1 to 5.2. Percentiles improved to the 35th percentile, compared to the 23rd percentile in reading comprehension before attention therapy. The Control Group showed no significant change in either attention scores or reading. Another way to look at the results is to compare the achieved learning rate over a time period. Prior to receiving Attention Therapy, students in the Experimental Group improved their grade equivalent reading level by 3 years over 5.2 years in school, or a learning rate of 58%. Following completion of the twelve one-hour weekly Attention Therapy, these same students improved their grade equivalent reading level by 1.1 over 5 months, equivalent to a learning rate of 220%. Conclusions and ImplicationsThe principal purpose of this study was to measure the effect of
visual attention therapy on reading comprehension. The children in this study
did not receive any reading comprehension therapy; yet, the children in the
Experimental Group that received Attention Therapy made significant improvements
in reading comprehension, while the children in the Control Group made no
improvement. The researchers also observed during the therapy that the
integration of memory, speed of information processing, and the ability to
develop improved cognitive strategies responds as a triad, which appears to
influence cognitive performance and reading comprehension. The exact mechanisms
behind these observations were not studied. Your comments are welcome...
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