The Reading Screening web site was created to empower parents, teachers,
and other professionals to have a broader understanding of reading, reading disabilities,
phonological processing, and dyslexia. It is hoped that the Reading Screening
site will be very useful to parents, teachers, and professionals as they try to
more fully understand the nature of their child’s, student’s, or client’s reading
difficulties.
The Reading Screening’s Summary of Results Report provides a comprehensive, specific,
and professional reading assessment. No special training is necessary for the parent,
teacher, or professional to perform the reading assessment. All of the instructions
are available on each page of the Reading Screening. It is hoped that the
parent can take the results of the reading assessment to his or her student’s school
so that school officials will know precisely the nature of the reading difficulty.
The child’s reading instruction can then be more appropriately created to meet the
child’s reading instruction needs.
If the results suggest that the child is at-risk of having reading difficulties
or dyslexia, or if the child is currently experiencing reading difficulties or dyslexia,
there is a link to the CARRD Help Area. The CARRD’s Help Area provides information
regarding the results of the Reading Screening, how to interpret the results
of the Reading Screening, information concerning reading disabilities,
dyslexia, the role phonological processing plays in reading assessment and reading
instruction, how to motivate children who are poor readers, and what the parent,
teacher, or professional can do to provide appropriate reading instruction for the
child who might be experiencing reading difficulties or dyslexia.
The Reading Screening system was designed for an adult to administer to
assess a child's reading and phonological processing abilities. Each of the 14 tasks
is preceded by an instruction page that briefly describes the nature of the task
and what you, the person who is giving the Reading Screening, should do.
The tasks are presented one item at a time.
The Reading Screening was developed to be as easy as possible to give.
Instructions are given on each page of each task with easy reference to instructions
if further clarification is needed or if the adult giving the Reading Screening
forgets the way the task is supposed to be presented, after a task has been paused.
Once the Reading Screening has been successfully completed, the child's/student's
performance is analyzed and a report is generated that presents the child's/student's
performance on each task and the overall score; the Global At Risk Score (GARS).
From the
GARS, the child's performance is rated as either At Risk, Marginally
At Risk, or Not At Risk.
To prepare for giving the Reading Screening, it is strongly recommended
that the adult who will be administering the tasks print the Instructions,
read them, and become thoroughly familiar with them. The better informed the adult
is, the smoother the Reading Screening will be. However, when giving the
Reading Screening, all the things that will be said to the child or student
is contained within each of the items. Although the more familiar the adult is with
the tasks, the more accurate and reliable the results will be, the site was developed
so that administration is as simple and straightforward as possible.
When you have decided to administer the Reading Screening, make sure that
you and your child or student have comfortable chairs to sit in by the computer.
Make sure that the room is as free of distractions as possible, which includes other
family members or students. You will be reading the instructions presented on the
computer to your child or student who will be sitting near the computer. For the
first half of the Reading Screening your child or student does not need
to see the computer screen. During the second half, he or she will need to interact
with the Reading Screening by telling the names of letters, read words,
and other things that he or she will see on the computer screen. You will still
need to report your child or student's performance. You will still be the person
who is giving the instructions for the Reading Screening and who is submitting
the results.
If your child or student gets tired or needs a break, you can pause the Reading
Screening and return to it later. Please remember your User Name and Password.
You will need them to get back into the Reading Screening and resume where
you stopped.
This web site is developed to assist parents, teachers, and professionals assess
the reading abilities of children between the ages of 5 and 12 years of age. The
results of the web-based Reading Screening Evaluation will help you to
understand the strengths and weaknesses that your child or student has in relation
to reading.
If you think that your child or student may have reading problems, you think that
your child or student might have dyslexia, or you are concerned that your child
or student is not performing up to his or her ability in reading, this web-based
Reading Screening Evaluation could help you.
Depending on the age of your child/student and how advanced his or her skills are,
the Reading Screening should take between 25 and 45 minutes. Time, however
is not a factor. Feel free to take your time and to take breaks, if necessary.
Remember, please be patient with your child or student. The point of the Reading
Screening is to determine your child's or student's strengths and weaknesses
with regard to reading and the skills that are necessary for reading. The Reading
Screening is appropriate for children between the ages of 5 and 12 years
of age. So, your child or student may get some or many items incorrect. If you administer
the Reading Screening as accurately and honestly as you can, you will begin
the process of determining your child or student's reading skills. If those skills
are deficient, you can get suggestions on this web site.
Good luck!
There is no time limit for completing any of the Reading Screening tasks.
At any point during the assessment, you can pause the Reading Screening.
The next time you return, you will be able to start right back where you had left
off.
Breaks are recomended. You have the option of completing the Reading Screening
in a single session but there is certainly no requirement to do so. Take the time
you need to complete the tasks. If needed, spread out the evaluation over multiple
days.
After all of the tasks have been completed for your child/student, the results of
the Reading Screening evaluation will be available to you immediately.
The results will be available from a generated report that presents the child's/student's
performance on each task and the overall score; the Global At Risk Score(GARS).
From the GARS, the child's/student's performance is rated as either At Risk, Marginally
At Risk, or Not At Risk.
Dyslexia is defined as a learning disorder marked by an inability to read; dys (Greek,
meaning difficult or disordered) and lexis (Greek, meaning word), hence difficult
or disordered word. Dyslexia essentially means difficulty reading words.
Researchers have now furthered the definition to include not only reading difficulties,
but an impairment in areas of language development that is observed when the individual
begins learning to read. These skills are measured in the Reading Screening assessment.
Learning to speak is a natural act.
The ability to learn to speak is natural and relatively effortless for nearly all
infants and toddlers. For most infants, simply exposing them to a language guarantees
that they will learn the language. Regardless of nationality, infants are generally
born with the ability to utter all of the sounds that humans are capable of producing.
After some time in a particular language environment, the infant will stop producing
some sounds in favor of those that he or she is hearing in his or her language environment.
The infant and young toddler's vocabulary also increases in leaps and bounds. For
the most part, this process is seemingly so automatic and effortless that Noam Chomsky
theorized that infants are born with a Language Acquisition Device (LAD).
The
LAD
is a theoretic neurological device whose primary purpose is to help the individual
to acquire language.
Learning to read is an unnatural, extremely effortful act.
Learning to read, on the other hand, is not a natural process and takes an extraordinary
amount of effort. Allowing young children to have exposure to text without someone
reading the text to them does not result in spontaneous reading.
Most young children are quite motivated to learn to read and look forward to attending
school in anticipation of learning how to read. This excitement can turn to frustration
and disappointment for children who are experiencing weaknesses in the skills that
are necessary to begin learning to read.
Poor phonological processing abilities is related to reading difficulties.
Researchers have identified the causative agent involved in the difficulty some
children have when trying to learn to read; phonological processing deficiencies.
Phonological processing refers to the ability of the individual to understand that
words are comprised of sounds and that these sounds can be used as linguistic building
blocks. As an example, when children who are not at risk for reading difficulties
are asked to say a word such as dog, and then to say it again without a
particular sound, they are able to do it. That is, say dog without the
/d/ sound. The child not at risk for reading difficulties would say og.
Children at risk for reading difficulties typically are not as able to consistently
do this. Learning to read involves decoding the text into sounds and then combining
those sounds to produce words. Without the ability to understand that words are
made up of sounds, children have a very serious difficulty learning to read. In
other words, phonological processing is a prerequisite skill when learning to read.
Some children are able to essentially memorize the visual representation of a word
along with the sounds that it represents. Unfortunately, this strategy fails when
the child's memory system becomes overloaded. This is one of the reasons that many
children who have reading difficulties are not identified until after third grade.
This is when the memorization strategy fails.
The alphabetic principle.
When children come to understand that letters of the alphabet represent the sounds
of language and that they can manipulate these sounds and symbols, they have the
essential skills to begin the process of learning to read. Linguistic researchers
refer to acquiring this ability as having learned the alphabetic principle.
Comprehending the alphabetic principle is the key to deciphering the phonological
code stored in the visual representation; the word. It is also the same strategy
that adult readers use to read a word they have never seen before.
Reading difficulties are a social problem, not just an academic one.
Children with reading difficulties are not just disadvantaged academically, they
are likely to experience a number of other important difficulties. They are likely
to have lower self-esteem and experience some conflict with their parents.
Imagine knowing that you are relatively intelligent. You know that you are at least
as smart as your friends. However, your friends are learning to read, but you are
not. Unfortunately, children are likely to attribute their difficulties learning
to read with "being stupid." Of course, they are not. But when children
are unable to do particular tasks or do not have specific skills, they typically
attribute this lack of ability as a deficiency in intelligence. In addition, parents
get very frustrated with their children with reading difficulties. They know how
critically important the ability to read is. Teachers many times suggest that in
first grade children learn to read, while after third grade, children read
to learn. The educational system relies on child's ability to read. Parents
also know that, to a large extent, their children's ability to later gain and maintain
employment will be related to their children's ability to read. Most jobs today
require reading ability. Parents who are not aware of the reasons for reading difficulties
sometimes believe that since their children are intelligent enough to learn to read
and are not doing well learning to read, are simply not trying hard enough. This
sometimes leads to harsh and hurtful words. Because parents love their children
and want the best for them, they feel that they need to help motivate their children
to work harder. Regrettably, this motivation does not work. Children with reading
difficulties need specific and explicit instruction that will not improve with "increased
motivation" or with the simple passage of time. Waiting simply delays improvement
and widens the gap between good and poor readers.
Reading Screening
The Reading Screening was created to help parents, teachers, and other
professionals thoroughly understand the nature of their child, student, or client's
reading ability. It is hoped that the results of the Reading Screening,
and the assistance offered at the
CARRD
web site will not only provide information about reading, but will help to clarify
the individual's skills and abilities and to provide suggestions for improving their
phonological processing and reading abilities. In essence, correcting a reading
difficulty will do much more than just improve academic skills. It opens up tremendous
opportunity that might not otherwise be available to the child with reading difficulties
CARRD -- The Center for the Assessment and Remediation of Reading Difficulties.
Established in 1996 after nearly a decade of research and development. The CARRD
offers three programs:
- the Identification and Intervention program (IIP)
- the After School & Summer Program (ASSP)
- the ADHD Screening Program
Web Browser
The Reading Screening site is developed conforming to XHTML 1.0 Transitional
standards. Netscape, Microsoft Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox, as well as other
browsers generally support this W3C standard.
If you are having difficulty browsing this site, please let us know.
Please, send us a message
if you experience difficulties.
Sounds
Some of the tasks in the Reading Screening assessment will include sound
bits for complimenting some of the question/responses.
To test to see if your computer system can please give the
Sound Test
a try.
If you do NOT remember your Reading Screening password, please use the Password
Recovery located on the
Guest Services
page.
If an individual decides not to begin a Reading Screening assessment after
he or she has become a member of the Reading Screening system, the user is entitled
to receive a full refund provided that less than 15 days have passed since enrolling
a child. If the user enrolled a child who is unable to begin a Reading Screening
assessment, the user can also request that the enrollment be transferred to another
child.
Please note, once an assessment has been started, no refunds or transfers will be
allowed.
To request a refund or transfer an assesment, submit an email message to
CustomerService@readingscreening.org with specifics for the request.