A Randomized Controlled Trial of three theoretically motivated interventions for children with reading comprehension difficulties
Lead Research Organisation:
University of York
Department Name: Psychology
Abstract
Abstracts are not currently available in GtR for all funded research. This is normally because the abstract was not required at the time of proposal submission, but may be because it included sensitive information such as personal details.
Publications
Clarke PJ
(2010)
Ameliorating children's reading-comprehension difficulties: a randomized controlled trial.
in Psychological science
Paula Clarke (author)
(2009)
Examining the long term wffects of three interventions to support reading comprehension in poor comprehenders
Paula Clarke (author)
(2009)
The York READing for MEaning Project : developing interventions to support poor comprehenders
Description | The key findings were that interventions targeting both oral language skills and metacognitive skills involved in reading comprehension brought about significant gains in reading comprehension in 9-10 year-olds selected because they were 'poor comprehenders'. An adaptation of the programme for children in secondary school showed much weaker effects. |
Exploitation Route | We have written a book to be used by teachers to disseminate the findings to practitioners: 'Developing Reading Comprehension' by Paula Clarke, Emma Truelove, Charles Hulme and Margaret Snowling (Wiley, 2013) We have recently completed a field trial to evaluate the effectiveness of the approach with children in secondary school (Year 7). This was funded by Education Endowment Foundation whose evaluation report is here https://educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/projects-and-evaluation/projects/reach/ and we have written the following paper based on it.Clarke, P.J., Paul, S-A., Smith, G., Snowling, M., & Hulme, C. (2017) Reading intervention for poor readers at the transition to secondary school. Scientific Studies of Reading http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10888438.2017.1318393 |
Sectors | Education |
URL | https://educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/projects-and-evaluation/projects/reach/ |
Description | As per our original proposal, we held 4 seminars focusing on different aspects of reading comprehension. The invited experts differed only slightly from those proposed. The presentations in each seminar spanned theory and practice; there was an interactive poster session in which early career researchers presented their work and a discussion session bringing out practical implications. Topics were as follows: 1: Theoretical, empirical and educational perspectives on reading comprehension 2: Language skills and reading comprehension. 3: Working memory and text comprehension. 4: Interventions to promote reading comprehension. 5. The participants. Each seminar was attended by researchers, practitioners, graduate students, teachers , teacher educators, and policy makers from local authorities as well as from the National Primary Strategy and DCSF. We also welcomed a small number of researchers from Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Australia, Brazil, India. The breakdown was roughly similar for each meeting: 50% academic researcher; 25% graduate students; 12% early career researcher; 12% practitioner/policy maker. There was a range of disciplines; psychology, education, speech and language therapy, educational psychology, computer science, educational policy. 6. Level of demand. We had 40-48 delegates at each seminar and we always had a waiting list |
First Year Of Impact | 2008 |
Sector | Education |
Impact Types | Societal |
Description | Education endowment Foundation - Projects |
Amount | £525,000 (GBP) |
Organisation | Education Endowment Foundation |
Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 08/2012 |
End | 12/2014 |
Description | Chile Language and Reading Intervention (CLARA) |
Organisation | University of Santiago, Chile |
Country | Chile |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Clarke has become an advisor with ESRC-Newton funded project to develop and intervention in Chile using principles from the current trial (Snowling and Hulme are Co-Is of the Chilean project) |
Collaborator Contribution | Co-investigators in new trial |
Impact | speech-language pathology, genetics, psychology, education |
Start Year | 2016 |