2 research outputs found
A new procedure to measure children's reading speed and accuracy in Italian
Impaired readers in primary school should be early
recognized, in order to asses a targeted intervention within the
school and to start a teaching that respects the difficulties in
learning to read, to write and to perform calculations. Screening
procedures inside the primary schools aimed at detecting children
with difficulties in reading, are of fundamental importance for
guaranteeing an early identification of dyslexic children and
reducing both the primary negative effects - on learning - and the
secondary negative effects - on the development of the personality
- of this disturbance. In this study we propose a new screening
procedure measuring reading speed and accuracy. This procedure is
very fast (it is exactly one minute long), simple, cheap and can
be provided by teachers without technical knowledge. On the
contrary, most of the currently used diagnostic tests, are about
10 minutes long and must be provided by experts. These two major
flaws prevent the widespread use of these tests. On the basis of
the results obtained in a survey on about 1500 students attending
primary school in Italy, we investigate the relationships between
variables used in the screening procedure and variables measuring
speed and accuracy in the currently used diagnostic tests in
Italy. Then, we analyze the validity of the screening procedure
from a statistical point of view and with an explorative factor
analysis we show that reading speed and accuracy seem to be two
separate symptoms of the dyslexia phenomenon
