Efficacy of Let's Know! First Grade
- Conditions
- Developmental Language Disorder and Language Impairment
- Registration Number
- NCT06945289
- Lead Sponsor
- Arizona State University
- Brief Summary
Oral language skills are vital for reading comprehension. Some children, however, are at increased risk for reading comprehension difficulties due to underlying oral language deficits. School-based interventions that target children's abilities to understand and produce spoken language have shown positive effects for improving language and reading comprehension of children with typical development and those at-risk for language disorders, so it is likely that they will benefit children with low oral language skills.
The purpose of this study is to examine the efficacy of a small-group intervention for improve language skills in first grade students with low oral language skills.
- Detailed Description
Oral language skills, which consist of both lower-level (vocabulary and grammar) and higher-level skills (inferencing, comprehension monitoring, and text structure knowledge) are crucial for reading comprehension. Children with low oral language skills are at increased risk for negative academic outcomes due to their deficits in understanding and producing language. Multi-component interventions have shown positive effects for improving language comprehension and reading comprehension outcomes of children with typical development and at-risk for language and literacy disorders, and thus may benefit children with low oral language skills.
The purpose of this study is to examine the efficacy of Let's Know!, a small group multi-component intervention, for improving language comprehension skills in first-grade students with low oral language skills. A randomized controlled trial will be employed to compare the language comprehension outcomes for a treatment group compared to a business-as-usual control group.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 22
- enrolled in first-grade;
- receive a score of below than 5 on two items on the Student Language Scale (Nelson et al., 2018) or be receiving school speech-language services for language impairment;
- be proficient in English, per caregiver report;
- have no other neurological impairments (e.g., intellectual disability, autism) per parent report;
- have corrected vision;
- no hearing impairment.
- cannot be enrolled in English-Language Learner services in the school.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Curriculum-Aligned Vocabulary Measure From enrollment to the end of treatment at 10 weeks of intervention. Vocabulary measure to assess participants' knowledge of 16 vocabulary words taught during the intervention.
Curriculum-Aligned Inferencing Measure From enrollment to the end of treatment at 10 weeks of intervention. This measure will examine students' knowledge of making inferences through narrative texts. There are 16 total questions for this measure.
Curriculum-Aligned Comprehension Monitoring Measure From enrollment to the end of treatment at 10 weeks of intervention. This is a curriculum-aligned measure of comprehension monitoring strategies taught during intervention. There are 4 total questions for this measure.
Curriculum-Aligned Text Structure Knowledge Measure From enrollment to the end of treatment at 10 weeks of intervention. This is a curriculum-aligned measure of text structure knowledge taught during the intervention. The participant is read a story, is asked to retell the story, and then is asked 3 questions about main events. This occurs twice for a total of 2 retells and 6 comprehension questions.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Arizona State University
🇺🇸Tempe, Arizona, United States