Reading instruction for students with intellectual disabilities who require augmentative and alternative communication: A multiple single case study with baseline, posttest, follow-up, and maintenance
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/33993Date
2024-06-26Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Ulriksen, Line Britt; Bilet-Mossige, Marthe; Cogo Moreira, Hugo; Øien, Roald A; Nordahl-Hansen, AndersAbstract
The purpose of the current study was to examine whether seven children, aged 6–10 years, with intellectual disabilities who require augmentative and alternative communication, could acquire phonological awareness and reading skills by using a reading material that is based on research on the evidence-based reading program Accessible literacy learning. The effect of the measures has been examined using a multiple single-case design with baseline, posttest, follow-up, and maintenance. All the teachers were trained to deliver the reading intervention in the students’ familiar place at school. The results indicated that students with intellectual disabilities who require augmentative and alternative communication could acquire phonological awareness and decoding by working systematically with reading material based on evidence-based strategies.
Publisher
ElsevierCitation
Ulriksen LB, Bilet-Mossige M, Cogo Moreira H, Øien RA, Nordahl-Hansen AJ. Reading instruction for students with intellectual disabilities who require augmentative and alternative communication: A multiple single case study with baseline, posttest, follow-up, and maintenance. Research in Developmental Disabilities. 2024;151Metadata
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