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"Working memory" is a term used to refer to the systems responsible
for the temporary storage of information during the performance of
cognitive tasks. The efficiency of working memory skills in
children may place limitations on the learning and performance of
educationally important skills such as reading, language
comprehension and arithmetic. Originally published in 1992, this
monograph considers the development of working memory skills in
children with severe learning difficulties. These children have
marked difficulties with a wide range of cognitive tasks. The
studies reported show that they also experience profound
difficulties in verbal working memory tasks. These memory problems
are associated with a failure to rehearse information within an
articulatory loop. Training the children to rehearse material is
shown to help alleviate these problems. The implications of these
studies for understanding normal memory development, and for models
of the structure of working memory and its development are
discussed. It is argued that the working memory deficits seen in
people with severe learning difficulties may contribute to their
difficulties on other cognitive tasks.
This volume includes chapters by a number of leading researchers in
the area of reading and spelling development. They review what is
currently known about both normal and impaired development of
decoding, comprehension, and spelling skills. They also consider
recent work on the remediation of reading and spelling difficulties
in children and discuss effective remedial strategies.
"Working memory" is a term used to refer to the systems responsible
for the temporary storage of information during the performance of
cognitive tasks. The efficiency of working memory skills in
children may place limitations on the learning and performance of
educationally important skills such as reading, language
comprehension and arithmetic. Originally published in 1992, this
monograph considers the development of working memory skills in
children with severe learning difficulties. These children have
marked difficulties with a wide range of cognitive tasks. The
studies reported show that they also experience profound
difficulties in verbal working memory tasks. These memory problems
are associated with a failure to rehearse information within an
articulatory loop. Training the children to rehearse material is
shown to help alleviate these problems. The implications of these
studies for understanding normal memory development, and for models
of the structure of working memory and its development are
discussed. It is argued that the working memory deficits seen in
people with severe learning difficulties may contribute to their
difficulties on other cognitive tasks.
Originally published in 1981, this title is based on the author's
doctoral thesis and the research reported was carried out at the
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford. By the
1980s it was generally recognised that there are a number of
children of adequate general intelligence who nevertheless
experience inordinate difficulties in learning to read. This book
examines some of the possible reasons for those children's reading
difficulties, and at the same time explores the basis of a teaching
technique which was reputed to help them to learn to read. Although
the terminology is very much of the time, this book will still be
of interest to those concerned with the reasons behind difficulties
in children learning to read.
Originally published in 1981, this title is based on the author's
doctoral thesis and the research reported was carried out at the
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford. By the
1980s it was generally recognised that there are a number of
children of adequate general intelligence who nevertheless
experience inordinate difficulties in learning to read. This book
examines some of the possible reasons for those children's reading
difficulties, and at the same time explores the basis of a teaching
technique which was reputed to help them to learn to read. Although
the terminology is very much of the time, this book will still be
of interest to those concerned with the reasons behind the
difficulties children have in learning to read.
This volume includes chapters by a number of leading researchers in
the area of reading and spelling development. They review what is
currently known about both normal and impaired development of
decoding, comprehension, and spelling skills. They also consider
recent work on the remediation of reading and spelling difficulties
in children and discuss effective remedial strategies.
Explanations of reading disorders need to be framed in terms of
theories of the normal development of reading and spelling. This
collection of papers, based on a selection of those to be presented
to the Third International Conference of the British Dyslexia
Association, in April 1994, brings together studies of dyslexia and
normal reading development. Key topics include the role of
underlying language skills for the development of reading and
reading disorders, individual differences amongst dyslexic readers,
the biological bases of dyslexia, and techniques for improving
reading skills in dyslexic and other poor readers.
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