Vocabulary skills, syntax skills, and sentence-level comprehension
Methodologies for improving a student's phonemic awareness, decoding, spelling, oral and written comprehension are described herein. The method is embodied in a suite of twelve exercises operable on a computing device. The exercises are geared towards training of 1st and 2nd grade students but are not limited to that. The methods present an entertaining screen environment, with target stimulus, and foil or distracter stimulus presented visually, textually, and aurally. The student is required to identify the target stimulus from the distracter stimulus within the context of each exercise. Progress from easier trials to more difficult trials is made as the student successfully completes particular difficulty levels.
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This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/957,886, filed Oct. 4, 2004, entitled “METHOD FOR DEVELOPING COGNITIVE SKILLS IN READING”. That application claimed priority from U.S. Provisional applications: 60/508,597 filed Oct. 3, 2003; and 60/569,601 filed May 10, 2004.
This application is also a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/342,938, filed Jan. 30, 2006 entitled “METHOD FOR DEVELOPING COGNITIVE SKILLS IN READING”, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/957,886, referenced above.
This application is also a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/349,700, filed Feb. 8, 2006 entitled “METHOD FOR IMPROVING VOCABULARY, CONCEPT KNOWLEDGE, AND DECODING SKILLS USING SEMANTIC AND LINGUISTIC SORTING ON A COMPUTING DEVICE”.
This application is also a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/349,675 filed on Feb. 8, 2006 entitled “METHOD FOR DEVELOPING COGNITIVE SKILLS USING SPELLING AND WORD BUILDING ON A COMPUTING DEVICE”.
This application is also a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/349,699 filed on Feb. 8, 2006 entitled “METHOD FOR IMPROVING SENTENCE COMPREHENSION, VOCABULARY SKILLS, AND READING FOR MEANING USING CLOZE TASKS ON A COMPUTING DEVICE”.
This application is also a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/349,676 filed on Feb. 8, 2006 entitled “A METHOD FOR IMPROVING LISTENING COMPREHENSION AND WORKING MEMORY SKILLS ON A COMPUTING DEVICE”.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThis invention relates in general to the field of education training in reading, and more specifically to a computer software program for cognitive skills training to help students become better readers.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONThe present application relates to a computer software program entitled “Fast ForWord Language to Reading” developed by Scientific Learning Corporation. Founded in 1996, Scientific Learning (Nasdaq: SCIL) combines the latest advances in brain research and proprietary technology to create products and services that develop learning and communication skills. Based on more than 30 years of neuroscience research, Scientific Learning's Fast ForWord® family of products use patented technology to target the language and reading skills widely recognized as the keys to all learning. Each product's interactive exercises integrate proprietary CD-ROM and Internet technology to create an optimal learning environment that adapts to the level of each student. Patented Web-based tracking tools provide ongoing monitoring of each student's progress. In March of 1997, after an extensive field trial with almost 500 children at 35 sites, the Company launched its first Fast ForWord® product, Fast ForWord Language software, an Internet and CD-ROM product that develops the fundamental language skills that are the building blocks for reading success. This product is described in the following U.S. Pat. No.: 5,927,988 entitled “METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR TRAINING OF SENSORY AND PERCEPTUAL SYSTEMS IN LLI SUBJECTS”; U.S. Pat. No. 6,159,014 entitled “METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR TRAINING OF COGNITIVE AND MEMORY SYSTEMS IN HUMANS”; and U.S. Pat. No. 6,261,101 entitled “METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR COGNITIVE TRAINING OF HUMANS USING ADAPTIVE TIMING OF EXERCISES”; each of which is hereby incorporated by reference for all purposes. Numerous other patents have been issued to Scientific Learning Corporation for its inventions.
The Fast ForWord Language to Reading software builds upon the technology developed by Scientific Learning Corporation, and provides a highly efficient, targeted workout that isolates and develops Learning MAPs—Memory, Attention, Processing, and Sequencing—in the context of reading skills that correlate directly to school curriculum standards, including Phonemic awareness; Phonics, Decoding and Advanced Decoding; Spelling and Vocabulary, Word recognition and fluency; and Sentence and passage comprehension.
SUMMARYThe present invention provides a method for improving phonemic awareness in students. The invention is intended for execution on a computing device capable of displaying and aurally presenting words and/or phonemes. The method utilizes a number of exercises to train students, the exercises presenting information aurally and visually, and requiring the student to make selections based on the information presented. The selections are recorded, with the exercise tracking progress according to the selections.
Various embodiments of a system and method for improving vocabulary skills, syntax skills, and sentence-level comprehension in a person are provided.
In some embodiments, a stimulus picture set including a plurality of stimulus pictures may be provided. A stimulus picture from the stimulus picture set may be presented to the person via a computing device, e.g., via a display of the computing device. A plurality of phrases may then be presented to the person, e.g., textually, where one of the plurality of phrases best describes the stimulus picture. In some embodiments, one or more of the plurality of phrases may include a sentence, i.e., may be presented in a sentence.
The person may then be required to select a phrase from the plurality of phrases that best describes the stimulus picture. For example, the person may select the phrase with a pointing device, may select a button indicating the phrase in the GUI with the pointing device, and/or may press one or more keys on a keyboard coupled to the computing device to indicate selection of the phrase.
The presenting the stimulus picture, the presenting the plurality of phrases, and the requiring, may be performed for each stimulus picture and corresponding plurality of phrases in a unit, where the unit is included in a plurality of units, each unit including a respective subset of the stimulus pictures in the stimulus picture set and corresponding pluralities of phrases. A determination may then be made as to whether the person selected the phrase that best describes the stimulus picture for each stimulus picture in the unit.
The presenting the stimulus picture, the presenting the plurality of phrases, the requiring, the performing, and the determining may be repeated for each unit in the plurality of units, where the repeating improves vocabulary skills, syntax skills, and sentence-level comprehension in the person.
In some embodiments, the plurality of phrases includes one or more foil phrases that use vocabulary that is relevant to the presented stimulus picture, but that does not correctly describe the stimulus picture. In one embodiment, more than one of the phrases may be true with respect to the picture, but not equally descriptive of the stimulus picture, i.e., one of the phrases will always best describe the stimulus picture.
Each unit may include a respective plurality of trials, each trial including the presenting a stimulus picture, the presenting a plurality of phrases, and the requiring, with respect to a respective stimulus picture and corresponding plurality of phrases. Moreover, each unit may be characterized by a reading difficulty level and a syntactic difficulty level. In one embodiment, the person may be allowed to progress through syntactic difficulty levels and reading difficulty levels independently, e.g., because each person may respond differently to these two dimensions of difficulty, it may be possible to proceed through the various levels following different sequences (of units).
The reading difficulty level of a unit may be based on vocabulary difficulty of the phrases of the unit, and length of the phrases of the unit. The syntactic difficulty level of a unit may be one of a plurality of syntactic difficulty levels, each syntactic difficulty level associated with a plurality of syntactic structures, where each syntactic structure includes a respective plurality of syntactic items. The syntactic structures and syntactic items within a unit may be selected randomly for trials in the unit.
Determining if the person selected the phrase that best describes the stimulus picture for each stimulus picture in the unit may include separately evaluating the person's selections in trials with respect to each syntactic structure within the syntactic difficulty level of the unit, where passing a unit includes correctly selecting the phrase for a specified percentage of trials with respect to each syntactic structure within the syntactic difficulty level of the unit.
In some embodiments, if the person passes a unit, the person may advance to a unit with the same syntactic complexity level, but with increased reading difficulty. If the person fails a unit, repeating the unit may be repeated, but with the trials of the unit presented in a new random order.
An open unit may be or include a unit that has not been passed. All units are preferably initially open units. The repeating the presenting the stimulus picture, the presenting the plurality of phrases, the requiring, the performing, and the determining for each unit in the plurality of units may include performing trials in each open unit of the plurality of open units.
In one embodiment, performing trials in each open unit of the plurality of open units may include setting a current unit to a first unit of the plurality of units, where the first unit has a first reading difficulty level and a first syntactic complexity level, and performing trials for the current unit. If the person does not pass the current unit, the current unit may be repeated until the person passes the current unit, or the person fails the current unit a specified number of times. If the person fails the current unit the specified number of times, the current unit may be kept open for later presentation to the person. If the person passes the current unit, the current unit may be closed.
If there are more units in the plurality of units, the current unit may be incremented to a next unit of the plurality of units, and trials performed in the current unit. If all units have been presented, and there are further open units, e.g., open units that were previously attempted unsuccessfully, then for each unit in the further open units, the current unit may be set to a next open unit of the further open units, and trials performed in the current unit. Similar to above, if the person passes the current unit, the current unit may be close, otherwise, the current unit may be kept open for later presentation to the person.
In some embodiments, performing trials in each open unit of the plurality of open units may be performed over a plurality of sessions, and where each successive session begins approximately where a previous session ends. For example, the sessions may occur a specified number times each day, for a specified number of days.
Additionally, in preferred embodiments, the presenting the stimulus picture, the presenting the plurality of phrases, the requiring, the performing, and the determining may be performed via a graphical user interface (GUI) displayed on a display of the computing device. For example, the GUI may display a student indicator, a time indicator, an initiation button, whereby the person invokes the presenting the stimulus picture; and/or a count indicator, i.e., a score indicator, operable to indicate points awarded to the person.
In some embodiments, the GUI may also display a main character, where the main character performs the presenting the stimulus picture. The GUI may further display one or more secondary characters, where the one or more secondary characters may perform the presenting the plurality of phrases. In one embodiment, a sound may be played indicating the correctness or incorrectness of the selection. For example, the sound may be played via headphones attached to the computing device. In some embodiments, if the selection is incorrect, the incorrect phrases may be grayed out, and the correct phrase highlighted. Moreover, points may be awarded based on the correctness of the selected phrase.
In preferred embodiments, the repeating may be performed a plurality of times to improve vocabulary skills, syntax skills, and sentence-level comprehension in the person, e.g., over a plurality of sessions, as described above. Thus, various embodiments of the systems and methods described herein may facilitate improvement of vocabulary skills, syntax skills, and sentence-level comprehension in a person, e.g., a child student.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent upon study of the remaining portions of the specification and drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The Language to Reading programs that will be described below are intended to be executed on some form of computing device that has a visual display, acoustic presentation, and some mechanism to indicate selection of options. While such a computing device encompasses everything from PC's, to laptops, to PDA's, and now even cell phones, one skilled in the art will appreciate that the methods of the present invention should not be restricted to the particular mechanisms upon which they are run. But, to provide a context for discussing the methods of the present invention, applicant will briefly describe one of the possible environments in which the methods can be utilized.
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The Fast ForWord Reading programs have been separated into two program sets entitled Reading 1 (adapted to 1st grade reading curriculum), and Reading 2 (adapted to 2nd grade reading curriculum). Within each program set, a number of program exercises have been created, each of which are directed at training particular cognitive skills.
The exercises in both of the exercise sets will now be described in detail. The description will provide a general overview of a exercise, including its goals, its features, and a brief description of the exercise. The description will then outline the tasks of the exercise, and will describe the student's interaction in the exercise. The stimulus sets used to train the student will then be provided. After the description, the reader will be referred to the drawings where s/he will be walked through the exercise play, as if s/he were at the computer, particularly illustrating the novel features of the exercise. Finally, a flow chart illustrating the method of the exercise will be provided. The description of the exercises will begin with the first exercise of program set Reading 1, and will continue until all of the exercises of Reading 1 have been described. The description will then continue with the first exercise of program set Reading 2, and will continue until all of the exercises of Reading 2 have been described.
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Program Set—Reading 1
Exercise—1: Bear Bags
The goal of this exercise is to improve phonemic awareness, understanding of alphabetic principles (phonics), and decoding of one-syllable words. In this exercise, the student is asked to help Mama Bear sort words (on pieces of toast) into phoneme-based categories (in lunch bags). The exercise develops phonemic awareness along with grapheme/phoneme associations. The exercise starts with initial consonants, and progresses to final consonants, short vowels, and long vowels. Initially, sounds that are easy to discriminate will be contrasted; later the contrasts will involve confusable sounds. The same sorting categories will be presented in two stages; initially sorting stimuli are presented aurally with pictures, later they are presented aurally with text. Because they may be presented as text, the stimulus words have transparent spellings whenever possible. In the sorting exercise the student will sort words into 1, 2, or 4 bins (lunch bags). The words will be sorted on the basis of the phoneme in the position currently targeted. The target phoneme could be the initial or final consonant, or the medial vowel.
The very first time the student works on this exercise, only 1 sorting bin is available for a “familiarization round” of 4 trials only. Otherwise, the student will be presented with either two bins representing two categories, and items presented in blocks of eight, or four bins representing all four categories from a group, with blocks of 20 items. In “Stage 1” a stimulus item is presented—first aurally and then visually with a picture. The student should recognize the phoneme in the target position, and click on the relevant bin to sort the word. The student should master a block of trials (representing a given set of phonemes in a given position) in Stage 1 before advancing to Stage 2. In Stage 1, the student is first presented with 2 bins (block of 8 items) before moving onto 4 bins with items in blocks of 20. In “Stage 2” a stimulus item is presented—first aurally and then visually with the written word. Items are presented in blocks of 20 with 4 bins only. A fluency round is also provided which will give the student an opportunity to develop speed at recognizing and identifying phonemes and mapping graphemes to phonemes. A countdown timer and other visual cues will indicate to the student that this is a fluency round. There are two levels of difficulty in the sound contrasts across bins (i.e., the foil set). An easier level contrasts nonconfusable sounds, whereas a harder level contrasts confusable sounds.
When beginning a new unit, the student is required to click an “OR” button. The categories used in the current unit will be presented in the sorting bins on the screen. In Stage 1, the stimulus is represented as a picture, with an aural presentation just before the word to be sorted pops out of a toaster. The student responds by clicking on a category bin (lunch bag) to sort the word. Sorting bins are labeled with a picture of a sample item, and its written name. The letter(s) corresponding to the target sound are highlighted (in red) in the name of the sample item. The student can also click on a speaker associated with the category to hear the example. Whenever a new category bin or set of bins is displayed, the category's description is aurally presented, with an accompanying highlight on the lunch bag before the first trial begins. For example: For the category initial-/t/, the word to sort is “toy.” The word “toy” is aurally presented, then a picture of a toy pops out of the toaster. To complete the trial correctly, the student selects the initial-/t/ bin, which is labeled with the written word “tub,” and a picture of a bathtub.
In Stage 2, when a student masters a block of categories at Stage 1, they are presented with the same categories at Stage 2. The student is again required to click the OR button. As before, the stimulus is first aurally presented, but now the visual stimulus that drops down is a written word—rather than a picture (for example, [toy]) and the student responds by clicking on the correct category to sort the word. The written stimulus words also have the target phoneme highlighted (in this example, “t” in “toy” is highlighted). The sorting bins at Stage 2 have only the corresponding picture for that category (e.g., pictures of a pig, tub, rat, or cub). This is to prevent a simple visual matching of letter to letter. Instead, the student is encouraged to read the stimulus word, think about the names of the items on the bins, and compare them phonemically. When this set of sounds is mastered, the student can move onto a new set of sounds. The student can also click on a speaker associated with the category to hear the example. Whenever a new category bin or set of bins is displayed (e.g. at the beginning of a new unit), the category's description is aurally presented, with an accompanying highlight on the bin before the first trial begins.
The Fluency Round occurs after mastery of a block in stage 2. The Fluency round has the same characteristics and functionality as a regular round of trials in Stage 2, with the exception that only the shorter versions of correct standard animations play. A timer on the interface indicates the amount of time for the fluency round. The student is given 60 seconds to complete the fluency round.
Stimuli:
There are three types of sound targets and a total of 33 phonemic categories in this exercise. The categories are listed here with the item that will be used to label the sorting bin for that category:
Stimulus words are selected based on several criteria. Each category should have approximately 10 words. And, approximately five words for each category should be picturable. Whenever possible, the vocabulary should be at 2nd grade level or lower. All words can be presented as text (either during Stage 2, or in Stage 1 when receiving corrective feedback). Therefore all stimuli should be transparently spelled CVCs whenever possible. When there are no other words available, some non-transparent segments, can be included (in fact a few words include consonant clusters and digraphs, e.g., teeth, goat, clam). However, the target segment should be transparent, in accordance with the following rules: Each target segment that is a consonant or soft vowel is spelled with a single letter that is the regular spelling for that sound. When the target segment is a long /A/, /I/, or /O/ it should be spelled with silent-e, long /U/ can be spelled with either silent-e or [oo], and long /E/ should be spelled with [ee].
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The first time the student plays Bear Bags, a training stage is initiated which only shows the student a single target phoneme 820. Then, referring to
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Once the initial training has been completed, the student should understand that what they are to do is to pair stimulus words with target words, based on similarities between the words. Initially, the similarity is the beginning consonant. But, as training progresses, the similarity includes medial vowels, and ending consonants. And, as training progresses, the differences between the target phonemes become less, thereby making the trials more difficult.
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With the above understanding of the screens and aural presentation of the exercise Bear Bags, the following will discuss the progression thru the exercise using various stimulus sets. In one embodiment, the stimulus sets are divided into 16 sets, 8 considered “easy” and 8 considered “hard”. More specifically, the 16 stimulus sets are:
Each stimulus set is considered a block, which is a different set of four letters. For example, referring briefly back to
Flow begins at block 1502, and proceeds to block 1504.
At block 1504, an initial training is provided, displaying just 1 target phoneme (as shown in
At block 1506, the stimulus set (or block) of phonemes to be tested on is set to 1, which is the first block in the easy sound contrasts. Also, the stage is set to 1, which will become clearer below. Flow then proceeds to block 1508.
At block 1508, the Unit for testing is set to 1. The purpose of the Unit will become clearer below.
At block 1510, a first trial is presented. Recall from the above, that the first trial begins when the student selects the selection paw on the toaster. At this point, two target phonemes are presented, followed by a stimulus phoneme for matching. In one embodiment, during stage 1, unit 1, four trials are presented. The student then selects the selection paw, and another four trials are presented. Flow then proceeds to decision block 1512.
At decision block 1512 a determination is made as to whether the student has passed Unit 1. In one embodiment, to pass Unit 1, the student should correctly respond to 100% of the 8 trials presented. If they correctly respond to the eight trials (in block 1), flow proceeds to decision block 1518. However, if they do not achieve 100% success, flow proceeds to block 1514.
At block 1514, a different set of two letters, from block 1, are used to present 8 more trials. Flow then proceeds to decision block 1516.
At decision block 1516 a determination is made, the same as in decision block 1512, as to whether the student has correctly responded to 100% of the trials in Unit 1. If so, flow proceeds to decision block 1518. If not, the student is given a total of 3 chances to pass Unit 1, using Block 1. If they do, flow proceeds to decision block 1518. If not, flow proceeds to block 1520.
At block 1520, a new block (stimulus set) is opened for testing. But, block 1 is left open and will be repeated later. Flow then proceeds back to block 1510.
At decision block 1518, a determination is made as to whether the student has correctly responded to 90% of the trials in Unit 2. In one embodiment, Unit 2 utilizes four target phonemes, such as those shown in
At this point, the target phonemes have shown both the picture of a word, and the word itself. In addition, the stimulus phoneme has been shown with a picture only, and an aural presentation of the phoneme. This combination of picture/text for the targets, and text only for the stimulus, is considered Stage 1.
At decision block 1522, a determination is made as to whether the student has correctly responded to 90% of the trials in Unit 2, Stage 2. In one embodiment, Unit 2 utilizes four target phonemes, and presents 20 trials, five at a time. Thus, to get 90% of the trials, the student should correctly respond to 18 out of the 20 trials. From the last paragraph, Stage 2 implies that the form of presentation of the trials shows the picture only for the target phonemes, and not the text, and the text only for the stimulus phoneme. Of course, other variations or combinations are possible. And, as above, the student is given is given three chances to pass Unit 2 for the current block. If they do correctly respond to 90% of the trials, in the present stage, in the present unit, for the current block, flow proceeds to block 1524. If they do not correctly respond to 90% of the trials, after three chances, flow proceeds to block 1520 where another block is selected, but the current block is left open.
At block 1524, the student enters a 1 minute timed trial, as shown in
At block 1526, the current block is closed. That is, the student has correctly responded to 100% of Unit 1, Stage 1 trials, and at least 90% of Unit 2, Stage 1, and Unit 3, Stage 2 trials. Thus, the block used for these units/stages is closed and will not be repeated within the exercise. Flow then proceeds to decision block 1526.
At decision block 1526, a determination is made as to whether all blocks have been closed. If not, flow proceeds to block 1520 where a trial begins on the next block. However, if all blocks have been closed, flow proceeds to block 1528 where the program Bear Bags is completed.
What has been described above is one embodiment illustrating a method of the present invention to improve a student's phonemic awareness, understand alphabetic principles of phonics, and decode one syllable words, by progressively testing the student to sort/match, words according to their beginning and ending consonants, as well as their medial vowels. One skilled in the art should appreciate that other combinations of starting/ending consonants could be used, the number of target phonemes presented in each trial could vary, and the number of trials presented for purposes of progression could vary, all without departing from the scope of the present invention. With this in mind, attention is now directed, not at the next exercise in Reading 1, but at a parallel exercise in Reading 2, called Bear Bags: More Lunch. In organizing the present description, it was believed that rather than describing the exercises in the order that they were played, it might be easier to comprehend if similar exercises were discussed in the same context.
Program Set—Reading 2
Exercise—1: Bear Bags: More Lunch
A goal in the exercise Bear Bags: More Lunch is improve phonemic awareness, understanding of alphabetic principles (phonics), and decoding of one-syllable words.
In this exercise, the student is asked to help Papa Bear sort words (on pieces of toast) into phoneme-based categories (in lunch bags). The exercise develops phonemic awareness along with grapheme/phoneme associations. The exercise starts with initial consonants, then progresses to final consonants, short vowels, and long vowels. Initially, sounds that are easy to discriminate will be contrasted, later the contrasts will involve confusable sounds.
In the sorting exercise the student will sort words into 1, 2, or 4 bins (lunch bags). The words will be sorted on the basis of the phoneme in the position currently targeted. The target phoneme could be the vowel or the initial or final consonant or consonant cluster. The very first time the student works on this exercise, only 1 sorting bin is available for a “familiarization round” of 4 trials only. Otherwise, the student will be presented with either two bins representing two categories, and items presented in blocks of eight, or four bins representing all four categories from a group, with items presented in blocks of 20.
In regular interaction, a stimulus item is presented—first aurally and then visually with the written word. The student should recognize the phoneme in the target position, and click on the relevant bin (lunch bag) to sort the word. The student should master a block of trials (representing a given set of phonemes in a given position) before advancing to the Fluency Round.
In the fluency round, the task will give the student an opportunity to develop speed at recognizing and identifying phonemes and mapping graphemes to phonemes. A countdown timer and other visual cues will indicate to the student that this is a fluency round.
There are two levels of difficulty in the sound contrasts across bins (i.e., the foil set). The easy level contrasts non-confusable sounds, whereas the hard level contrasts confusable sounds.
When beginning a new unit, the student is required to click the selection (e.g., the OR) button. The categories used in the current unit will be presented in the sorting bins on the screen. The stimulus is first aurally presented, and the visual stimulus that drops down is a written word. The written stimulus words also have the target phoneme highlighted. The student can hear the word again at any time during the trial by clicking on the OR button.
The sorting bins have only the corresponding picture for that category (e.g., pictures of a pig, tub, rat, or cub). This is to prevent a simple visual matching of letter to letter. Instead, the student is encouraged to read the stimulus word, think about the names of the items on the bins, and compare them phonemically. When this set of sounds is mastered, the student can move onto a new set of sounds. The student can also click on the speaker associated with the category to hear the example. The student can click the word again to hear it, but fewer points will be awarded and the trial will not count toward advancement. Whenever a new category bin or set of bins is displayed, the category's description is aurally presented, with an accompanying highlight on the mailbox before the first trial begins.
There are three target positions and a total of 53 sound pattern categories in this exercise. The categories are listed below with the item that will be used to label the sorting bin for that category.
A trial is evaluated as correct if the student clicks on the correct bin to sort the word. If the student makes the correct selection they receive points and that trial is counted toward advancement. Otherwise the trial is failed and the student receives no points. Unit level evaluation will occur for the 4, 8, or 20 trials presented for each block. The student should get 90% correct to pass that block.
For the 2×4 units, students should get 100% correct to pass the block. Students get three attempts to pass each unit. If they pass the 4×5 grid, they will get a Fluency Round on that block. Fluency rounds are “bonus” rounds, and they are not evaluated for progression. If students fail a 2×4 grid, they will be presented with another 2×4 grid constructed from the remaining 2 categories. If they fail that 2×4 grid, they transition to the next open block. If students fail a 4×5 grid for any block, they transition to the next open block. If students fail a block, they should repeat the same block, beginning with the 2×4 unit. They will return to master incomplete blocks at the end of the exercise.
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Exercise play progression is similar to that described above in
Program Set—Reading 1
Exercise—2: Flying Fish
The goal of this exercise is to improve decoding skills, identification of sight words, and auditory memory. This exercise builds the word identification skills that are necessary for reading fluency. Using auditory clues, the student is required to remember a spoken word while waiting for the matching pronounced (and written) word to be heard (and seen). This exercise also improves working memory by requiring the student to remember the sound of the words in order to find the matching written word. Students are also trained on phonological awareness and visual tracking to reinforce left-to-right reading patterns.
To begin exercise play, as in the other exercises described above, the student clicks the OR button to hear a target word then pays attention to a sequence of written and/or aurally presented words. The student should identify the word that matches the target word by clicking on the matching word when it appears.
In Stage 1, the “fishing pelican” pronounces a stimulus word. Then a series of spoken and written target words fly across the screen on fish. The student clicks on the target word when it matches the stimulus word. The student continues doing so until all the words in the set are matched. In one embodiment there are 10 words per set.
In Stage 2, the student works with the same set of words as in Stage 1, but this time the stimuli and choices are presented differently. The word is only aurally presented (no written component as in Stage 1). The choices are presented as written text (no aural component as in Stage 1). The student continues to work through Stage 2 until the end of the word set. At the end of Stage 2, the student moves on to Stage 1 with a new set of words, and then onto Stage 2 after Stage 1 is complete. This cycle continues with 4 sets of stimuli. At the end of this cycle, the student moves on to a Fluency Round.
In the Fluency Round, all 40 words from the previous 4 sets (or 30 from the previous 3 sets if final set) are presented in the manner of Stage 2 (spoken Stimulus, written choices). All of the words from each set are lumped together into one big group of 40 words, then randomly sampled. This is a timed round of approximately 2 minutes. The rate of presentation of the sequence of words is variable: the sequence starts off slow, then speeds up depending on which stage the student is in (Stage 1 slowest, Fluency Round fastest). In one embodiment, the rates of Target and Stim Presentation for Stage 1 and 2 are: target presentation: 800 ms; stimulus text presentation: 1300 ms.
Progression:
A Unit is the smallest group of trials to be evaluated for advancement. A Set is a group of 10 words presented together. A Round is a group of 4 or 5 sets of words. A trial is evaluated as correct if the student responds by clicking on the correct word to match the stimulus word. To successfully pass a unit (a set of 10 words), the student should get 90% of the trials correct. Evaluation occurs at the end of a unit. A listing of the words in each set, and the sets in each round, are located in Appendix A.
Stage 1: Present set of 10 words. Stage 2: Present same set of 10 words as in Stage 1. Now go to Stage 1 again with new set of words. Stage 1: Present new set of 10 words. Stage 2: Present same set of 10 words as in Stage 1. The student should meet the criteria for Stage 1 before moving on to Stage 2 for any given set of 10 words. Likewise, they should meet the criteria for Stage 2 in 4 sets, before moving on to a Fluency Round. When a student passes stage 2 on any four units (or the last three), they will get a Fluency Round using words from those units. The Fluency Round is not evaluated for progression—but for points only. If the Fluency Round occurs at the end of a session, the student is allowed to complete the Fluency Round before the session times out. If the student exits manually from the Fluency Round, the round will be exited immediately. If at the end of the exercise the student returns to repeat a Stage 2 for any set of words, they should first progress through Stage 1 for that set, even if they met criteria the first time around. If a student repeats a unit three times without meeting criteria, the unit is skipped and is presented again at the end of the exercise. They then move on to the next open unit.
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At block 2504, the set, stage and round are set equal to 1. Recall from the above, that there are 31 sets of 10 words, each of which are presented twice, first in Stage 1, second in Stage 2. There are 6 rounds, the first 3 having 5 sets in each, the second 3 having 4 sets in each. After the starting set, stage and round is initialized, flow proceeds to block 2506.
At block 2506, a stimulus word is selected for the present set. In one embodiment, the stimulus word is randomly selected from the present set, with the selection made from the set of words that have not yet been tested on. Once the stimulus word is selected, it is presented to the student. If at stage 1, the word is shown, and spoken aurally. If at stage 2, the word is spoken only. Flow then proceeds to block 2508.
At block 2508, target words are presented. In one embodiment, the target words swim by, one at a time, although it is possible that multiple targets could be presented on the screen together. The target words are selected from the present set. During the presentation, the student should indicate a selection. If the student correctly matches the target word with the stimulus word, the word is marked “completed” for the set, and another trial is begun within that set. If the student does not correctly match the target word with the stimulus word, either by failing to make a selection, or by selecting the wrong target, that stimulus word is marked complete, and another trial is begun within that set. Flow then proceeds to decision block 2510.
At decision block 2510, a determination is made as to whether all of the stimulus words in the present set have been presented to the student. If not, flow proceeds back to block 2506. However, if all of the words in a set have been presented to the student, flow proceeds to decision block 2510.
At decision block 2510, a determination is made as to whether the student has passed the set successfully. That is, has the student met a predetermined threshold for the present set. In one embodiment, the predetermined threshold is 90%, or 9 out of 10 correct matches. However, one skilled in the art will appreciate that this could have easily been set at another fixed percentage (such as 70-100%), or alternatively, a given number of correct responses. If the student did not “pass” this set, flow proceeds to decision block 2514. But, if the student did “pass” this set, flow proceeds to decision block 2518.
At decision block 2514, a determination is made as to whether the student has attempted to pass the present set 3 times. Again, one skilled in the art will appreciate that alternative embodiments could present the present set any number of times, from just once, to as many times as necessary to “pass” the set. However, it was felt that if a student attempts a given set, and fails it 3 times in a row, that rather than having them continue in that set, it is better to let them move on, and retry that set another day. Thus, if the student has not attempted the present set 3 times, all of the completed words in the set are marked uncompleted, and flow proceeds back to block 2506 whether the present set is repeated. But, if the student has attempted the present set 3 times (and not passed), then flow proceeds to block 2516.
At block 2516, the words in the present set are marked uncompleted, the present set is left open, and the set is incremented. Flow then proceeds back to block 2506 where a new set will be presented.
At decision block 2518, a determination is made as to whether the student has just correctly passed a set at Stage 2? If not, then flow proceeds to block 2520. If s/he has, then flow proceeds to decision block 2522.
At block 2520, the stage is set to Stage 2. What this means, in one embodiment, is that the student will hear the stimulus word spoken only, without a graphical presentation of the stimulus word. All of the words in the present set are marked uncompleted, and flow proceeds back to block 2506 where the set is again presented.
At decision block 2522, a determination is made as to whether the student has completed a round. As above, sets have been grouped together into rounds. A completed round gives the student an opportunity to enter a timed trial, called a fluency stage, which groups all of the words in the sets within a round together. If a round is not complete, flow proceeds to block 2524. But, if the student has completed a round, flow proceeds to block 2526.
At block 2524, the current set is closed, and the set is incremented to begin a new set. Further, the stage is set back to 1 so the stimulus words for the new set will be presented both aurally and graphically. Flow then proceeds back to block 2506 for presentation of the new set.
At block 2526 a fluency round is begun. In the fluency round, the student is given a timed trial to match as many stimulus words as possible, with their targets. In one embodiment, the timed trial is 2 minutes in length, although other times are possible. The number of correct or incorrect matches do not effect the student's progress in the exercise. Further, all of the words within the sets associated with the present round are available for selection as stimulus/target words. Upon completion of the fluency round, flow proceeds to decision block 2528.
At decision block 2528, a determination is made as to whether any sets remain open. If not, then flow proceeds to block 2532 where the exercise completes. However, if there are open sets, flow proceeds to block 2530.
At block 2530, the next open set is selected. The next open set could be a set that has not yet been tested on. Or, the next open set could be a set that was attempted 3 times, in block 2514, and failed. In either case, the student is tested on all open sets until they are passed correctly, and closed, at block 2524.
What should be appreciated from the above is that a method has been shown which presents stimulus words to a student, graphically and aurally, as well as aurally only, and then the stimulus word disappears. A series of target words are then presented, for a period of time, to allow the student an opportunity to remember what the stimulus word was, and then match it with the target word before it disappears. The particular arrangement of words within sets, or sets within rounds, or ordering of stages, should not be considered as limiting to the invention, but rather as simply one embodiment of the possible success/progression through a group of words.
Program Set—Reading 2
Exercise—2: Fish Frenzy
The goal of Fish Frenzy is to improve decoding skills, identification of sight words, and auditory memory. This exercise builds the word identification skills that are necessary for reading fluency. Using auditory clues, the student is required to remember a spoken word while waiting for the matching pronounced (and written) word to be heard (and seen). This exercise also improves working memory by requiring the student to remember the sound of the words in order to find the matching written word. Students are also trained on phonological awareness and visual tracking to reinforce left-to-right reading patterns. The method of Fish Frenzy is similar to that of Flying Fish described above. A listing of the stimulus words in each set, and the sets in each round are included in Appendix A.
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Program Set—Reading 1
Exercise—3: Magic Rabbit
The goal of this exercise is to improve spelling and sensitivity to letter-sound correspondences. This exercise combines spelling and word-building practice. Using a click and drag interface, the student should either select the missing letter to complete a partially spelled word or rearrange scrambled letter tiles to spell a word. Items are presented as minimal spelling pairs where switching one letter turns one word into another (e.g., hat→bat). In the Beginning Levels, a series of rounds with restricted stimulus sets will be presented to progressively teach all of the target sound-letter correspondences, according to a phonics/spelling instructional sequence. To help build automaticity and generalization, the stimulus sets in the Advanced Levels will sample from all targeted letters and positions. These will be presented as chains of minimal pairs (e.g., bat, cat, cap, cup . . . ), building experience with word families and the combinatorial nature of our alphabetic writing system. All stimulus words will be Consonant-Vowel-Consonants (CVCs) with highly regular spellings (3-letters, and, in the beginning level only, 3-letters plus Silent-e). When a letter is needed to complete a new word, it will be chosen from a principled array in which the visual and phonetic similarity of foils is controlled. There will be two levels of foil difficulty, based on the discriminability of target and foils.
In the beginning level trials of this exercise, pairs of words are presented. First, a probe word is presented visually (spelled with letter tiles) and aurally (e.g, b a t “bat”). Next, one of the letter tiles in the probe word becomes blank (e.g., b a t→_a t). Finally, four letter tiles appear, representing the response choices, and the target word is presented aurally (e.g., “hat”). The student should select the correct letter tile and drag it on top of the blanked out letter to complete the spelling of the target word. In Advanced Level trials, an initial stimulus word is presented aurally, and its tiles appear in scrambled order (e.g., t c a→“cat”). The student should rearrange the tiles to correctly spell the word. For the subsequent trials in that round the word from the prior trial remains on screen, and serves as the probe word for the next trial. As in the beginning levels, one of the letter tiles in the probe word becomes blank. A response set of 4 letter tiles also appears, and a new stimulus word is presented aurally. The student should select the correct tile to complete the trial. To prevent students from being exposed to incorrectly spelled words, the incorrect placement of any letter will not be permitted.
In the initial trial in a round, after the student clicks the OR button a word is presented aurally. Scrambled letter tiles for a word appear, as do target spaces for those letters. Only the 3 tiles required to spell the word are presented (i.e, no “dummy” tiles are shown). A card with a picture that represents the word may also appear on screen. The student can click on the OR button to hear the stimulus word repeated. There will be no penalty for using the OR button to repeat the stimulus word. The student should drag the letters to the correct spaces to spell the word. If the response is incorrect, a second and third attempt is allowed. A student that gets all the letters correct on the first try will receive the most points; if a second or third try is needed, the student will receive the least amount of points. A failed third attempt is 0 points. The correct answer is shown after a third attempt.
In subsequent trials in a round, the student proceeds in the same manner as in the beginning level trials, with each completed stimulus word serving as the probe word for the next trial. One of the letter tiles in the probe word becomes blank. A response set of 4 letter tiles also appears, and a new stimulus word is presented aurally. The student should select the correct letter and drag it to the correct position to spell the word. If the response is incorrect, a second and third attempt is allowed.
For example: Trial 1) The word “cat” is aurally presented and a picture of a cat is also on screen. Three letter tiles for “a”, “c”, and “t” appear, as do 3 targets or blank spaces for those tiles to fill. In this case, the student clicks and drags the tiles to their appropriate targets to spell the word “Cat”.
A trial is evaluated as correct and counted toward advancement only if the student spells the word correctly on the first attempt. Second and third attempts can receive points, but are not counted toward advancement (they are considered “incorrect” for the purposed of advancement, even though they can still accumulate points). Exception: Scrambled words (Advanced Levels) are never evaluated for advancement, only for points as described above.
Evaluation of unit: For the beginning levels (1 & 3) evaluation will occur at the level of a block (20 of the 40 items randomly sampled from a group of four categories). For the advanced levels (2 & 4), evaluation will occur at the level of a round (10 items in a chain of minimal pairs, which are always presented together). Evaluation will occur when a student completes a unit.
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At block 3204, an initial training is provided. More specifically 4 trials are given to the student, particularly illustrating what they are to do, which is to drag a target letter (or tile) to a blank title next to other letters, to spell the word that was aurally presented. The student remains in block 3204 until they understand what they are to do. Flow then proceeds to block 3206.
At block 3206, the Unit is set to 1, and the Level is set to 1. In one embodiment, there are 40 Chains of 10 words (see Appendix A), where each word has three easy targets, and three hard targets. At level 1, each trial within a chain is presented to the student in the order shown, but the chains are randomly selected from a group of categories (e.g., initial-s, initial-t, initial-m, initial-g). There are 20 trials in each unit (20 items randomly selected from 40 items within 4 categories). Presentation of each trial is as described above with respect to
At decision block 3210 a determination is made as to whether the student has passed the unit. In one embodiment, the student should correctly spell 18 out of 20 trials, or correctly respond to 90% of the trials in order to pass a unit. Further, a student is given three opportunities to pass a unit. If they do not pass a unit the first time, it is repeated. If they do not pass it a second time, it is repeated. If it is not passed a third time, flow proceeds to block 3212. However, if they do pass a unit, flow proceeds to decision block 3214.
At block 3212, the present unit is left open, which means that the student will have to repeat the unit at a later time. In one embodiment, the unit is left to the end of the exercise where the student should return to all units still open, (i.e., all the units not passed during normal progression), and repeat the units until they are passed. Flow then proceeds to decision block 3214.
At decision block 3214, a determination is made as to whether all units at the present level have been completed (other than the ones left open in block 3212). If not, flow proceeds to block 3216. Otherwise, flow proceeds to block 3218.
At block 3216, the unit number is incremented. At level 1, there are 8 unit with twenty trials in each unit. After the unit number is incremented, flow proceeds back to block 3208 for presentation of trials in the new unit.
At block 3218, the student has passed all units of a set level (1 or 3). The next level (2 or 4) is therefore opened. Flow then proceeds to block 3220.
At block 3220, a new unit is selected for the new level (2 or 4). In levels 2 or 4, there are 20 units (from the 40 chains) with just 11 trials in each unit—the first trial of each unit not counted). At level 2, stimulus words are no longer grouped to represent a reduced set of letters. And, the spelling patters within rounds, and the order of rounds are unconstrained. Units are selected randomly with trials in a unit presented in order. Unit 2 utilizes the easy to discriminate letters. The only difference between unit 2 and unit 4 is that unit 4 utilizes the list of hard to discriminate letters. Once the new unit is selected, flow proceeds to block 3222.
At block 3222, the trials are presented to the student. Flow then proceeds to decision block 3224.
At decision block 3224, a determination is made as to whether the student has passed the unit. In one embodiment, the student should correctly drag 9 out of 10 (or 90%) of the target letters to the blank tile, to spell the aurally presented word. And, as above, the student is given three chances to pass the unit. If they do not, flow proceeds to block 3226. However, if they pass the present unit, flow proceeds to decision block 3228.
At block 3226, the present unit is left open. Flow then proceeds to decision block 3228.
At decision block 3228, a determination is made as to whether all 20 units have been completed. If not, flow proceeds to block 3230. Otherwise, flow proceeds to block 3232.
At block 3230, the unit number is incremented. Or rather, the present unit is closed, and the next unit is randomly selected from the list of remaining units. Flow then proceeds back to block 3222 for presentation of the next unit.
At block 3232, the next level is open. If the student is currently at level 2, the next level is level 3. In one embodiment, level 3 is the same as level 1, but, the foils used are from the list of hard to discriminate letters. Flow then proceeds back to block 3208 for presentation of a new unit at level 3. However, if the level that is presently open is level 4, then the student has proceeded through all levels. Flow therefore proceeds to decision block 3234.
At decision block 3234, a determination is made as to whether any units remain open. If not, flow proceeds to block 3238 where the exercise ends. Otherwise, flow proceeds to block 3236 where the method is repeated for all of the open units, until passed.
Program Set—Reading 2
Exercise—3: Magic Bird
The goal of the exercise Magic Bird is to improve spelling and sensitivity to letter-sound correspondences, with a focus on the multi-letter units typically taught in curriculum for 2nd grade students. This exercise combines spelling and word-building practice applied to spelling patterns and word families. The task is designed to put an emphasis on word families and multiple-letter spelling patterns such as blends and digraphs. The student should select the missing onset or rime to complete a partially spelled word or should make as many real words as possible by pairing onsets and rimes from a grid. The rabbit magician does card tricks that present the student with the answer choices. In the beginning levels, a series of rounds with restricted stimulus sets will be presented to progressively teach all of the targeted spelling patterns, according to a phonics/spelling instructional sequence. In the advanced levels students master those spelling patterns as they build sets of words that belong to common (and less common) word families. Targeted spelling patterns include consonant blends and digraphs (e.g., stop, fish), vowel digraphs (e.g., speed), and simple grammatical endings (e.g., fishing). The instructional sequence and selection of targeted spelling patterns is informed by L. C. Moats' “Spelling Scope and Sequence Chart.”
In the Beginning Levels (Teaching Pairs) of this exercise, the student should select the missing onset or rime to complete a partially spelled word. First, a probe word is presented visually and aurally (e.g. “name”). Next, part of the probe word drops off and is replaced by a blank (e.g., name→_ame ). Finally, four tiles appear with different letter combinations (e.g., “bl”, “fr”, “sp”, br”) and the target word is presented aurally (e.g., “blame”). The student should select the correct tile (by clicking on it) to complete the spelling of the target word.
In Advanced Levels (Family Matches), students should make as many real words as possible by matching a partially spelled stimulus word with several onsets or rimes from a 4- or 9-tile grid. (e.g., the stimulus rime _ate might be presented along with an onset response grid of dr_, pl_, gl_, sh_, st_, sl_, br_, cr_, v_). Each time the student clicks on a tile that makes a real word, the assembled word is presented visually and aurally. The student continues working with this grid until all possible word combinations have been presented, or until an incorrect selection is made.
Trial (Beginning levels): After the student clicks the OR button, a probe word is presented visually and aurally. Next, the beginning or end of the word drops off and is replaced by a space. Next, the stimulus word is presented aurally and four tiles showing different letter combinations (onsets or rimes) appear, one of which fills the blank in the partial word to spell the stimulus word. The student is asked to click the correct letter combination to correctly spell the word. If the response is incorrect, a second and third attempt is allowed. Note: For the block of trials in which the spelling pattern is a morphological ending, this sequence changes as follows: the probe word is presented visually with a blank already at the end. The probe word is not presented aurally. The rest of the procedure is the same, but one option will always be a blank tile, and the probe and stimulus words will sometimes be identical (there will be a dummy blank, but it will not be “filled-in”).
Trial: (Advanced levels) After the student clicks the OR button, a partially spelled word stimulus appears along with a grid of possible responses. The stimulus will be either an English onset (consonantal word beginning) or a rime (a word ending consisting of a vowel, usually followed by a consonant). The responses will be the complementary word part, either onsets or rimes (e.g., if the stimulus were bl_, the response set could be _ade, _if, _ude, _ock). All response options will be legal letter strings that do occur in that position in some English word (rimes can either appear as rimes or as entire words, e.g., “eve”). No foil word will be a homophone of a common English word (e.g, “treet,” “mune,” “thay”). The response grid will consist of a varied number of correct responses (ones that combine with the stimulus to make true English words, like “block”) and incorrect responses (ones that make non-words when combined with the stimulus, like “blif”). A grid should always include at least one correct response, but not more than 60% of the grid (i.e., 1-2 correct for a 4-tile grid, and 1-5 correct for a 9-tile grid). The student continues working with this grid until all possible word combinations have been selected, or an incorrect selection is made. In either of these instances, the grid will automatically close.
In the beginning levels, there are two kinds of trials: regular and feedback. In a regular trial, a new stimulus item is presented and the user makes an initial response. If a regular trial is failed, the user will have as many as two feedback trials (additional attempts at the same item). In the advanced levels, each stimulus item is paired with a variable number of correct responses. Each user response constitutes a trial. When a new grid is presented, the user can have up to 5 regular trials. If a trial is failed, the grid will be represented up to two times, and all trials are learning trials. Learning trials never count for progression, and are awarded fewer points.
In the advanced levels (Family Matches) several words from the same “word family” will be presented simultaneously, using a single stimulus stem, and a grid of response options. Small grids will have 4 response options including a random number of between 1 and 2 correct responses. Large grid will have 9 response options, including a random number of between 1 and 5 correct responses. Each of the 81 grids (or word families) will be presented, in random order, at both the small grid and large grid levels.
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The method begins at block 3602 and proceeds to block 3604.
At block 3604, an initial training is provided, similar to that provided in the exercise Magic Rabbit. That is, a word is presented graphically and aurally, then split apart, then a rhyming word is presented aurally, and the student is required to spell the presented word by selecting the appropriate missing letter(s). In Magic Bird, however, the student is not required to drag the letter to the open space. Rather, the student is simply required to click on the letter. Flow then proceeds to block 3606.
At block 3606, the level is set equal to 1, and all the blocks for that level are opened. Flow then proceeds to block 3608.
At block 3608, one of the open blocks at the current level is selected, and a trial is presented for that block. Flow then proceeds to decision block 3608.
At decision block 3608, a determination is made as to whether the student correctly spelled the target word. If s/he did, flow proceeds to decision block 3612. If s/he did not, then flow proceeds to decision block 3610.
At decision block 3610, the student is given three opportunities to select the correct spelling of the target word. As above, if an incorrect letter(s) is selected, they are grayed out, and the remaining letters are available to choose from. If the student correctly spells the word in 3 tries or less, flow proceeds to decision block 3612. Otherwise, flow proceeds to block 3611.
At block 3611, the correct answer is shown. Flow then proceeds to decision block 3612.
At decision block 3612, a determination is made as to whether all of the trials in the present block have been presented. First, the present trial is marked complete. Then, if other trials remain, flow proceeds back to block 3608 for presentation of another trial. But, if all trials in the present block have been presented, flow proceeds to decision block 3614.
At decision block 3614 a determination is made as to whether the student has successfully passed the block. In one embodiment, the student is required to pass 90% of the trials in a block, but other measures of success may be used. The student is given three opportunities to pass the present block. If the student has not passed the block, flow proceeds to block 3616. Otherwise, flow proceeds to decision block 3618.
At block 3616, as in the other exercises, the present block is left open, and will be repeated at the end of the exercise. That is, before completed the exercise, the student should pass all of the blocks at all levels. But, if they are unable to do so, after three attempts, the block is left open, and will be returned to on another day, after completing the other blocks.
At decision block 3618, a determination is made as to whether the present block is the last block at the current level. If it is not, flow proceeds to block 3619. However, if it is the last block in the current level, flow proceeds to decision block 3620.
At block 3619, the present block is closed, and the next block in the current level is selected for training. Flow then proceeds back to block 3608 for presentation of a trial in the new block.
At decision block 3620, a determination is made as to whether the next level is level 9 or 10. If it is not, flow proceeds to block 3621. But, if the next level is level 9 or 10, flow proceeds to block 3622.
At block 3621, the level is incremented. Flow then proceeds to block 3619 for selection of a block in the next level.
At block 3622, a different training is presented for levels 9 and 10. In levels 9 and 10, several words from the same “word family” are presented simultaneously, using a single stimulus stem, and a grid of response options is provided. Small grids have 4 response options including a random number of between 1 and 2 correct responses. A large grid will have 9 response options, including a random number of between 1 and 5 correct responses. Each of the 81 grids (or word families) are presented, in random order, at both the small grid and large grid levels. Each grid will be evaluated for 100% correction to pass. Failed grids are presented up to 2 more times at the end of the level.
As in the above exercises, after the student has completed the process shown in
Program Set—Reading 1
Exercise—4: Bedtime Beasties
In the exercise Bedtime Beasties, the goal is to improve sentence comprehension, vocabulary skills, and reading for meaning. This exercise uses the “cloze task,” in which a written and aurally presented sentence has a word missing. From four response options, the student should select the correct picture, word, upper or lower case letter, or punctuation mark to complete the sentence.
More specifically, the student is asked to show that he or she understands the meaning of a sentence by completing a doze (fill-in-the-blank) task. Vocabulary covered constitutes a core set of nouns including foods, animals, clothing, classroom items, and modes of transportation. End of sentence punctuation and the capitalization of initial words, names, and the pronoun “I” are also covered in this exercise. Participation builds vocabulary skills, knowledge of punctuation and capitalization rules, working memory, and awareness of sentence structure. Brief passages and individual sentences are used to provide contexts, with both fiction and non-fiction included. As the student gains mastery, sentence length increases and reading supports (e.g., voice-over, pictures) are reduced. Many of the decoding/spelling words and sight words taught in other exercises are presented here, in the context of sentences that demonstrate their meanings and syntactic roles.
In operation, a sentence is presented (text+aural or just text) with a blank indicating where a word is missing. The four response options are presented then in an area below the sentence The student selects the correct word or picture+word to complete the sentence. Granny elephant reads Baby elephant a story. The sentences are presented on a window shade, and the responses are available at the bottom of the screen. The sentences vary in length, depending on level (range: 4-19 words; mean: 11 words). Some sentences stand alone, and others are presented in sequences making up a brief fiction or non-fiction passages. Passages are 4, 5, or 6 sentences long. To help the student know whether they are reading part of a story or a stand alone sentence, there will be a passage length indicator at the bottom of the window shade. The passage length indicator will show a row of “page” icons mirroring the number of sentences (1, 4, 5, or 6), and highlighting the position of the current sentence within the passage.
The scope of the words includes mostly nouns, with a few attributes, prepositions, and verbs. It also includes punctuation and capitalization. Levels of difficulty are created by manipulating Text type (story and single-sentence), Length of sentence (short [mean: 8.1] and long [mean: 14.5]), Response type (picture+text, text-only only, capitalization, punctuation), Stimulus type (aural+text and text-only). After the student clicks the OR button, a sentence with a missing word or punctuation will appear on screen, along with four response options. If there is aural presentation, the blank created by the missing word is marked by a “blank” sound effect and a visual highlighting of the blank marker. The student selects the correct word or word+picture from the four response options to complete the sentence.
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As shown above, there are twelve levels within Bedtime Beasties, varying in difficulty between the length of the sentences and/or stories. In addition, in levels 1-8, the stimulus provided to the student is both aural and graphical (text), whereas in levels 9-12, the stimulus provided is text only.
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At block 4004 a training trial is presented. Flow then proceeds to block 4006.
At block 4006, the level for training is set equal to 1. Flow then proceeds to block 4008.
At block 4008, a trial is presented to the student. As above, this indicates that a sentence (or story) is read to the student, with or without pictures depending on the level, and the student is required to fill in the blank. The students correct or incorrect response is recorded. Flow then proceeds to decision block 4010.
At decision block 4010, a determination is made as to whether all trials within a level have been presented. If not, flow proceeds back to block 4008 for presentation of another trial. If the last trial in a level has been presented, flow proceeds to decision block 4012.
At decision block 4012, a determination is made as to whether the student has passed a level. In one embodiment, the student is required to correctly respond to 90% of the trials. Since each level has 20 trials, the student should correctly respond to 18 out of 20 trials. They are given three opportunities to pass each level. If they do not pass the first time, the level is repeated. If not passed on the 2nd try, the level is repeated. If not passed on the 3rd try, flow proceeds to block 4014. If however, the student passes the level, flow proceeds to block 4016.
At block 4014, the level is kept open to allow the student to retry the level at the end of the exercise. Flow then proceeds to block 4020.
At block 4016, the present level is closed. Flow then proceeds to decision block 4018.
At decision block 4018 a determination is made as to whether the student has passed all levels in the exercise. If not, flow proceeds to block 4020. If s/he has, then flow proceeds to block 4022.
At block 4020, the level is incremented. Flow proceeds back to block 4008 for presentation of a trial within the new level.
At block 4022, all levels have been completed, but if there are any levels that were not passed, and thus still open, they are repeated. After those are passed, flow proceeds to block 4024 where the exercise ends.
Program Set—Reading 2
Exercise—4: Leaping Lizards
The goal of this exercise is to improve vocabulary skills, sentence comprehension, and knowledge of word and sentence structure. This exercise uses a type of doze task, presenting written sentences that have a word, upper or lower case letter, or punctuation mark missing. The student should select the correct word, letter, or punctuation mark to complete the sentence from four choices.
The student is asked to show that he or she understands the meaning of a sentence by identifying which of four choices completes that sentence. Participation builds vocabulary and awareness of word and sentence structure. Basic rules in capitalization and punctuation, syntax, and inflectional morphology are covered. Both individual sentences and short passages (original fiction and nonfiction) are used for the context sentences. One longer passage is also included, that gives an informal lesson on grammatical concepts such as nouns & verbs, vowels & consonants, compound words, and syllables. After the student clicks the OR button, a sentence with a missing word, letter, or punctuation will appear on screen. (In levels 1 and 2, the sentences will also be presented aurally.) Four choices to complete the sentence also appear on screen. (In levels 1 and 2, the responses do not appear until the aural presentation is complete. In all other levels, the responses appear simultaneously with the stimulus sentence.) The student selects the correct choice to complete the sentence. The student selects from the four choices to complete the sentence. Some sentences stand alone, and others are presented in sequences making up a fiction or non-fiction passages. Most passages are just 5 or 6 sentences long, but one passage is 40 sentences long. To help the student know whether they are reading part of a story or a stand alone sentence, there will be a passage length indicator at the bottom of the window shade. The passage length indicator will show a row of “page” icons mirroring the number of sentences (1, 5, 6, 8, or 12), and highlighting the position of the current sentence within the passage. With respect to re-entry and the passage length indicator, the 40 sentence passage is broken into 4 “chapters” of 8 or 12 sentences (the 4 chapters will always be presented in sequence).
The sequence of progression will follow the content grid shown above, starting with level 1 and ending with level 16. Students who have made plateau-based transitions will return to uncompleted levels after being exposed to all of the content. Within a unit, items will be presented in random order unless they are part of a story. Items within a story should be presented together and in the specified sequence. The long (40 item) story that spans the two vocabulary sections is broken into 4 chapters (2 in each level, 8 or 12 items each). The two in each level chapters should be presented in the specified sequence.
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Program Set—Reading 1
Exercise—5: Buzz Fly
The goal of this exercise is to improve listening comprehension and working memory skills as measured by performance on multiple choice questions. In this exercise, the student listens to a passage and answers comprehension questions relating to each passage. The passages are presented on sheets of paper coming from the newsroom typewriter, and answer choices are presented by flies in the room. The passage is broken down into a number of “blocks” of text. The block is “read aloud” to the student and also presented as on-screen text. At the end of the block, the student should answer multiple choice question(s) to evaluate comprehension of that block. The questions are presented aurally and written, and the response choices are presented as pictures. After these questions, the student continues with subsequent blocks of text to complete the passage.
To begin a trial, the student clicks the OR button. The student is then presented with a block of text (written and aural). To help the student follow along with the aural presentation, the written text is synched to the audio with line-by-line highlighting (note: this is different than sentence-by-sentence). When a line of text is highlighted, the letters are black. All the other lines of text are non-highlighted, so the letters are in a lighter shade of gray. Once the last line of a block has been aurally presented, the text block disappears and the first question appears.
On a correct response, the response choice is aurally presented and the correct answer is highlighted in yellow. The points counter increases and the student hears a “ding” point by point. For example, if the student has 6 points and gets 3 more points for the trial they are on, rather than seeing the point total change from “6” to “9” and hearing one “ding”, the student will see the point total change from “6” to “7” to “8” and to “9”, with a “ding” for each point accumulated. The student then moves on to the next question of the block. If there are no more questions in the block to be answered, the OR becomes available. The student clicks the OR to move on to a new block.
On an incorrect response, the student will hear a “thunk”. The correct answer is not revealed—that is, the student will probably have another chance to get it right. The incorrect choice will first display in the rollover state, then change to a grayed out state.
The questions are presented written and aurally. Questions are presented with regular bold text (as they are just one sentence). The responses are presented as pictures (no aural presentation unless correct selection is made). To help the student know where they are in a passage (and when a passage begins and ends), there will be a passage length indicator at the bottom of passage text display. The passage length indicator will show a row of “page” icons mirroring the number of blocks of text and highlighting the position of the current block within the passage.
A trial is evaluated as correct if the student clicks on the correct answer to a question the first time it is presented. A correct answer to a learning trial does not evaluate as correct for progression. To successfully pass a unit, the student should answer 8 out of 9 questions correctly (for a unit of 9) or 11 of 12 questions correctly for a unit of 12. Passages with 6 questions are grouped in pairs to make a unit of 12, passages with 9 questions are their own unit. Only the first response to every trial is evaluated. If a trial (question) is repeated in the form of a learning trial, the additional response is not evaluated for progression, though points are awarded on a correct response. If the student meets the criteria for passing the unit (answering the question correctly on the first try), the unit is closed. Otherwise, all failed units will be repeated at the end of the level. The student will have a total of 3 tries to pass each unit (not including learning trials), before moving on to the next level.
A table below illustrates advancement in this exercise through five difficulty levels. If one or more questions were responded to incorrectly, the student gets another opportunity to answer the question(s)s correctly before moving on to the next block. The block is displayed again. The student moves on to the question or questions about the block of text. The incorrect response previously chosen is inactive and displayed in a grayed out state. The student responds again. This continues until all the incorrectly answered questions have been presented again. If one or more of these were responded to incorrectly, the block is displayed again followed by the presentation of the incorrect question. This time both incorrectly chosen responses are inactive and displayed in a grayed out state. If the student makes an incorrect response at this point the correct answer highlights and there is a short delay before the next question is shown. The questions are not shown a fourth time. If a student has not met criteria for a unit (after 3 attempts, not including the learning trials), then the student plateau transitions to the next open unit in the progression. However, all failed units will be repeated at the end of the exercise until passed.
The stimulus sets for this exercise are located in Appendix A.
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At block 4704, an initial training trial is presented. The student is read instructions regarding the exercise, and a first story. Then s/he is presented answers to the story. Correct or incorrect answers in the trial are not counted towards progression. Flow then proceeds to block 4706.
At block 4706, the unit number is set to 1, the passage is set to 1, and the block is set to 1. In one embodiment, in levels 1 and 2, there are 2 passages per unit, and 4 units per level. There are thus 8 passages per level. Further, there are 6 blocks per passage, with 1 trial per block for a total of 48 trials per level. In levels 3-5 there is 1 passage per unit, and 4 units per level. Thus, there are 4 passages per level. Further, there are 6 blocks per passage, with 9 trials per passage, with either 1 or 2 trials per block. Thus, there is a total of 36 trials per level. Flow then proceeds to block 4708.
At block 4708, a block is presented. That is, a block is a portion of a passage, as shown above in
At decision block 4710, a determination is made as to whether the student correctly responded to the block. If so, flow proceeds to decision block 4714. Otherwise, flow proceeds to block 4712.
At block 4712, the student is given a 2nd chance to correctly answer the question. Recall from
At decision block 4716, a determination is made as to whether the student correctly responded to the question, on the 2nd try. If s/he did, flow proceeds to decision block 4714. If they did not, flow proceeds to block 4718.
At block 4718, the student is presented a 3rd chance of responded correctly (with two incorrect selections grayed out). Flow then proceeds to decision block 4714.
At decision block 4714, a determination is made as to whether the just completed block is the last block in the passage. If not, flow proceeds back to block 4708 for presentation of the next block in the passage. Otherwise, flow proceeds to decision block 4720.
At decision block 4720 a determination is made as to whether the student passed the unit. In one embodiment, to pass a unit, 11 out of 12 trials (in levels 1 and 2) and 8 out of 9 trials (in levels 3-5) are required to pass a unit. If the student passes a unit, flow proceeds to decision block 4728. If the student does not pass a unit, flow proceeds to decision block 4722.
At decision block 4722, the student is given 3 opportunities to pass a unit. That is, the unit is repeated twice more, following the flow of blocks 4708-4720. If they do pass the unit within three attempts, flow proceeds to block 4726. Otherwise, flow proceeds to block 4724.
At block 4724, the unit is moved to the end of the level. Flow then proceeds to decision block 4728.
At block 4726, the unit is moved to the end of the exercise, as in the other exercises described above. Flow then proceeds to decision block 4728.
At decision block 4728, a determination is made as to whether the present unit is the last unit in the level. If not, flow proceeds to block 4730. But, if the present unit is the last unit in the level, flow proceeds to decision block 4732.
At block 4730, the next unit in the present level is opened. Flow then proceeds back to block 4708 for presentation of the first block in the new unit.
At decision block 4732, a determination is made as to whether the present level is the last level (e.g., level 5) in the exercise. If it is, flow proceeds to block 4736. If it is not, flow proceeds to block 4734.
At block 4734, the next level in the exercise is opened. Flow then proceeds back to block 4708 for presentation of the 1st block in the 1st unit of the next level.
At block 4736, all of the levels have been completed. But, if the student was unable to pass any of the units, they are repeated until passed, in block 4736. Flow then proceeds to block 4738 where the exercise ends.
Program Set—Reading 2
Exercise—5: Dog Bone
The goal of this exercise is to improve a students listening comprehension, sentence and reading skills, and working memory skills as measured by performance on multiple choice questions. Students listen to passages while reading along, and demonstrate their comprehension by answering questions. They will also be asked to reread the same passages independently, and answer a new set of questions. “What,” “where,” “who,” “when,” and “how” type questions will be asked, along with “Why” questions, and questions about cause and effect. Some questions will focus on story elements such as plot, setting and characters. Questions about word or story ambiguities will also be asked. In addition to fiction and nonfiction passages, students will be presented with other types of informational material such as graphs and charts which they should interpret to answer questions. During the aural presentation of passages, the written text will also be presented, with line by line highlighting to help the student follow along. Questions will be presented intermittently throughout each passage, to maintain engagement and reduce memory demands. To build sustained attention and working memory, the length of the passage blocks between questions will increase as students progress through the exercise. To support comprehension and help students follow along in the text, the exercise begins with 1st grade level vocabulary and a slower aural presentation rate. Later in the exercise, the aural presentation rate is increased and vocabulary up to the 3rd grade level is used. Passages will be aurally presented at controlled reading rates, falling within optimum wpm ranges identified for each difficulty level. To develop comprehension skills for a variety of text types, both fiction and nonfiction passages are presented throughout the exercise.
This exercise has two modes. In Mode 1, the student listens to a passage and answers comprehension questions relating to each passage. The passage is broken down into a number of “blocks” of text. A block is “read aloud” to the student and also presented as on-screen text (highlighted to synch to the aural presentation). At the end of the block, the student should answer multiple choice question(s) to evaluate comprehension of that block. Unlike the Buzz Fly exercise, the response choices are presented as text and not as pictures. After answering one or two questions, the student continues with subsequent blocks of text to complete the passage. In Mode 2, the student reads the on-screen text (the passage blocks and the questions) with no aural presentation. Passage blocks in the Reading Mode are repeated from the Listening Mode. However, the Reading Mode contains different comprehension questions than the Listening Mode. To help the student know where they are in a passage (and when a passage begins and ends), there will be a passage length indicator at the bottom of passage text display. The passage length indicator will show a row of “page” icons mirroring the number of blocks of text and highlighting the position of the current block within the passage.
A trial is evaluated as correct if the student clicks on the correct answer to a question the first time it is presented. A correct answer to a question repeated as a “learning trial” does not evaluate as correct for progression.
To successfully pass a unit (a passage), the student should answer 10 or 11 of 12 questions correctly. More specifically, each passage contains 12 questions, 6 in “Mode 1” and 6 in “Mode 2.” 5 of 6 correctly answered questions are required to pass Mode 1, 5 of 6 correctly answered questions are required to pass Mode 2. Only the first response to every trial is evaluated. If a trial (question) is repeated in a learning trial the additional response is not evaluated for progression, though points are awarded on a correct response. If the student successfully meets the criteria of a unit, the unit is closed. Otherwise, it will be repeated up to two more times at the end of the level.
To successfully pass a unit in Charts and Graphs, a student should answer 9 of 10 questions correctly. A unit consists of multiple charts, graphs, or tables of a specific type and a total of 10 questions.
The table below details the advancement from level to level.
All fiction passages within a level will be presented first, in random order. Nonfiction passages for the level will then be presented, also in random order. Tables and graphs are presented separately, at the end of the exercise. There are 4 units in the tables/charts/graphs portion. A unit consists of 2 or more tables/charts/graphs of the same type and 2 to 4 questions pertaining to each table/chart/graph. Each unit will have a total of 10 questions.
A student starts with an aural+text story (Mode 1) and if they pass it, would go on to the text-only version of the same story (Mode 2). If the student doesn't pass Mode 1, they transition to a different story in Mode 1. If the student fails while in Mode 2, s/he has to complete Mode 1 again when s/he returns to that story, before moving on to Mode 2.
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At block 5102, an initial trial is presented to the student. Instructions are presented aurally, and then a trial is presented aurally and visually, such as that shown in
At block 5104, the unit, block, level and mode are all set to 1. Flow then proceeds to block 5106.
At block 5106, a new block is presented. As in Buzz Fly, a block is a portion of a story. In level 1, unit 1, there are 6 blocks. The first block is presented in block 5106. Flow then proceeds to decision block 5108.
At decision block 5108, at determination is made as to whether the block was answered correctly. If so, flow proceeds to decision block 5112. Otherwise, flow proceeds to block 5110.
At block 5110, the block is repeated. That is, the story is presented again, and the question is asked again, this time, with the previously selected incorrect response grayed out. Flow then proceeds to decision block 5114.
At decision block 5114, a determination is made as to whether the block was answered correctly. If so, flow proceeds to decision block 5112. Otherwise, flow proceeds to block 5116.
At block 5116, the block is presented a 3rd time, this time, with the previous two incorrect answers grayed out. Flow then proceeds to decision block 5118.
At decision block 5118, a determination is made as to whether the block was answered correctly. If so, flow proceeds to decision block 5112. Otherwise, flow proceeds to block 5120.
At block 5120, the correct answer is highlighted. Flow then proceeds to decision block 5112.
At decision block 5112, a determination is made as to whether the present block is the last block in the unit. If not, flow proceeds back to block 5106 for presentation of the next block in the unit. However, if the present block is the last block in the unit, flow proceeds to decision block 5122.
At decision block 5122, a determination is made as to whether the present unit, in the present mode has been passed. For levels 1-5, the student is required to correctly respond to 5 out of 6 questions for each unit. For level 6, the student is required to correctly respond to 9 out of 10 questions. If the student passes, flow proceeds to decision block 5124. If the student does not pass, flow proceeds to decision block 5128.
At decision block 5124, a determination is made as to whether the passed unit was in mode 1. If it was, flow proceeds to block 5126. However, if the present unit was in mode 2, flow proceeds to decision block 5128.
At block 5126, mode 2 for the present unit is opened. Flow then proceeds back to block 5106 for presentation of the unit, again, but this time in mode 2.
At decision block 5128, a determination is made as to whether the present unit is the last unit in the level. If it is not, flow proceeds to block 5132. However, if the present unit is the last unit of the current level, flow proceeds to decision block 5130.
At decision block 5130 a determination is made as to whether any of the units in the present level were failed. If not, flow proceeds to block 5132. But, if any of the units were failed, flow proceeds to block 5134.
At block 5134, the failed units are repeated, one by one. Flow then proceeds to decision block 5136.
At decision block 5136 a determination is made as to whether any of the units in the present level were failed. If not, flow proceeds to block 5132. Otherwise, flow proceeds to block 5138.
At block 5138, the failed units are presented for a 3rd time. Flow then proceeds to decision block 5140.
At decision block 5140 a determination is made as to whether the student has failed any of the units, for a 3rd time. If not, flow proceeds to block 5132. However, if the student still has units that s/he has not passed, those units are left open, to be repeated at the end of the exercise, and flow proceeds to block 5132.
At block 5132, either the next unit in a level, or the next level is proceeded to. That is, if the path to block 5132 is from decision block 5128, then the next unit in the present level is chosen for presentation, and flow proceeds back to block 5106. However, if the path to block 5132 is from either decision block 5130 or 5136, then the present unit is the last unit in the level, so the next level is chosen for presentation, and flow proceeds back to block 5106. If, the path to block 5132 is from decision block 5140, as a result of the student having no failed units, then the present unit is the last unit in the level, so the next level is chosen for presentation, and flow proceeds back to block 5106. If however, the path to block 5132 is from decision block 5140, as a result of the student having failed units still open, those units are left open, and will be repeated at the end of this exercise. But, in the meantime, the next level is opened, and flow proceeds back to block 5106.
Program Set—Reading 1
Exercise—6: Quail Mail
Each of the exercises described above have had corresponding games in the program sets Reading 1 and Reading 2, albeit often differing methods. The present game “Quail Mail” in Reading 1, and the last game to be described “Ant Antics” in Reading 2, do not correspond to each other.
The goal of Quail Mail is to improve vocabulary, concept knowledge, and decoding skills. The student is asked to sort words into semantic and linguistic categories. This exercise encourages flexibility during reading and automatic access to the various dimensions of vocabulary.
In this exercise the student will sort pictures and/or words, one at a time, into different categories. The categories will include the following: Basic (Dogs, Trees, Flowers); Super-ordinate (Foods, Animals); Thematic (Animals on a farm, Things in a classroom); Descriptive (Functions: Clean with it; & Features: Bigger than a car); Linguistic (Syntax: Where, When, Who, What; & Morphology: Plural, Verb+ing, Verb+ed).
When first starting the exercise, the student will be presented with a single bin, representing a single category from the “Basic” category type, with items presented in blocks of four. Next a second category will be added, with two bins presented, and items presented in blocks of eight. Finally, four bins will be presented, representing all four categories from the group, with blocks of 32 items presented.
An Introductory Level presents simple stimuli to familiarize students with the sorting task. For this level the “Basic” category type is presented, including categories like “Dog” and “Tree.” Although easy to sort visually and conceptually, the members of these categories have subordinate-level names (e.g., dalmation and poodle; redwood and elm). These vocabulary items are too advanced to teach first graders. For this reason, all the items to be sorted at this level will be presented as pictures only, with neither text nor aural labels. Beyond the Introductory level, all stimulus items will initially be presented in a picture-word stage (picture+text+aural; PTA), and after students pass all of the categories in a category group, they repeat those categories in word-only stage (text+aural; TA). Finally, fluency Rounds are provided to give the student an opportunity to test fluency. A visual cue (full mailbag of cards or letters and the use of a timer) will indicate to the student that this is a “Fluency Round”, a speeded and time-limited version of the usual trial.
When beginning a new unit, the student will be required to click the OR button (there is no OR press in between trials, only at the beginning of a new unit). At this time, a new category bin or set of bins will be presented along with an aural description of each category. Next, a stimulus is presented visually and aurally. (The student can click the OR during a trial to repeat the aural presentation of the stimulus.) The student responds by clicking on the category bin to sort the word. New stimuli are presented automatically, until the unit is complete.
The basic interaction in the Fluency Round is essentially the same as with the rest of the exercise. A Fluency Round will occur whenever a student has reached the passing criterion for a category group in the text+aural stage (there is no Fluency Round in the picture+text+aural stage). The sorting bins will remain in the same positions but the content sampling will be newly randomized. The bin categories are not presented as they are at the beginning of a new unit with regular trials. In one embodiment, the Fluency Round is timed at one minute. If the student completes all the available trials before the time is up, a new random sampling of the stimulus for the current category group is presented. If the Fluency Round occurs at the end of a session, the student is allowed to complete the Fluency Round before the session times out. If the student exits manually from the Fluency Round, the round will be exited immediately.
The exercise includes the following content:
Below is a list of definitions that will be used to describe the progression or flow of the method used in Quail Mail:
- Category: The individual categories into which the student should sort the words (i.e. “Animals”).
- Category Group: Refers to a set of 4 categories that are always contrasted with each other. A 4×8 grid will always include all 4 categories from a single group. A 2×4 grid can include any two categories from a single group. Categories from different groups should never be presented together in the same grid.
- Category Type: All the individual categories come from six category types: Basic (will sort unlabeled pictures—no text or aural), Super-ordinate, Thematic, Descriptive: Functions, Descriptive: Features, Linguistic: Syntax & Morphology.
- Grid: Refers to the number of categories being contrasted and the number of items in a unit. There are three grid-sizes 1×4, 2×4, and 4×8. 1×4 occurs ONLY when the student enters the exercise for the very fist time as a familiarization to the exercise.
- Stage: Refers to the type of stimulus being presented (with or without a picture). The items from each category type are presented twice. First they are presented in the Picture-Word stage (picture+text+aural stimuli: PTA), then in the Word-Only stage (text+aural: TA).
- Unit: A unit is always the smallest group of trials to be evaluated for advancement.
A trial is evaluated as correct if the student responds by clicking the correct category for the word. For units of less than 10 trials (i.e., 1×4 and 2×4 grids), the student should get 100% correct. To successfully pass a 4×8 unit, the student should get 90% of the trials correct; 29 correct out of 32 items. Evaluation of the unit should happen at the completion of the unit. It is possible for a student to pass a unit if they miss the last item in the unit, however any reward animation should be delayed.
Picture-word and word-only stages—Categories are initially presented at the picture-word stage (picture+text+aural stimuli: PTA). After a student meets passing criteria for a 4×8 unit in the PTA stage, that category group is repeated at the word-only stage (text+aural: TA) with a 4×8 unit. The same items are presented at the PTA and TA stages. Only the visual stimuli and the random order of presentation change. Note: students who transition out of the PTA stage of a Category group due to plateau-based transitions should proceed to the PTA stage of the next open group, not the TA stage of the same group. Those that plateau-transition out of the TA stage should repeat the PTA stage for the category group at the 4×8 grid level, when they return to this group.
The first time a new group is entered, two bins are presented at the PTA stage. Items are presented in blocks of eight (randomly sampled from the two categories). To pass this unit, the student should correctly answer all eight items. If the 2×4 PTA unit is passed, four bins will be presented at the PTA stage, representing all four categories from a group. To pass this unit, the student should correctly answer 90% of the items (i.e., 29 of the 32). If the 4×8 PTA unit is passed, four bins will be presented at the TA stage. If the 4×8 TA unit is passed, four bins will be presented at the fluency stage.
In the PTA stage, the 2×4 grid is presented after the 1×4 grid or the first time a student enters any other Category Group. The 2×4 grid is also presented after a student fails a 4×8 grid in the PTA stage. Students get 3 chances to reach criterion and pass the 2×4 grid. If a student does NOT pass the first 2×4 grid, they will transition to a second 2×4 grid for the same group. The second 2×4 grid should be constructed from the two remaining categories in the same Category Group. Again, the student gets 3 chances to pass the new 2×4 grid. If a student passes any 2×4 grid, they will proceed to the 4×8 PTA grid in the same Category Group. If a student does NOT pass any 2×4 grid, they will proceed to the next open unit (i.e., plateau-based transition to a new Category Group).
Students get 3 chances to reach criterion and pass the 4×8 grid. If a student passes a 4×8 grid, the student progresses to a 4×8 TA (word only) grid for the same Category Group. Once a Category Group has been passed at the 4×8 grid level, the student will not return to the 2×4 level for this group. If a student fails a 4×8 grid, they will transition to the next open unit (i.e., the next Category Group). When the student returns to this category group, they will begin at the 2×4 grid level.
In the Text-Aural (word only) Stage, once a Category Group has been passed at the PTA stage, it is repeated at the TA stage with text+aural stimuli only (no picture). Only 4×8 grids are presented at the TA stage. When the criteria have been met in the Text-Aural stage for a Category Group, the student advances to the Fluency Round for that group (there is no Fluency Round for Basic categories at the Introductory Level or in the Picture-Text-Aural stage). After completion of the Fluency Round, this Category Group is closed. If a student fails a 4×8 grid in the TA stage, they will transition to the next open unit. When the student returns to this Category Group, they will begin at the 4×8 grid level in the PTA stage.
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As mentioned above, there are two types of target stimulus in the present exercise: basic types; and advanced types. Basic types present pictures of stimulus only. Advance types present either pictures+text+aural, or just text+aural. Basic type presentations are referred to as Type 1. Either of the advanced types are referred to as Type 2.
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At block 5604, an initial training exercise is presented. More specifically, a 1×4 grid is started. That is, four trials are presented using just 1 mailbox for sorting. The purpose of the initial training is to teach the student to select the target stimulus that corresponds to the category in the mailbox. There is no incorrect answer in the initial training. Flow then proceeds to decision block 5606.
At decision block 5606, a 2×4 grid is presented. That is, 4 trials are presented where the student has two mailbox options for sorting. Two sets of 2×4 grids are presented, or eight total trials. The student is required to correctly respond to all eight trials to advance. If they do, flow proceeds to block 5612. If the student does not correctly respond to all eight trials, they are given 3 more opportunities, at decision block 5608. If they still do not pass, flow proceeds to decision block 5610.
At decision block 5610, a second 2×4 grid is constructed from the two remaining categories in the same category group. Again, the student gets three opportunities to pass the new 2×4 grid. If the student passes this grid, at 100%, flow proceeds to block 5612. Otherwise, flow proceeds to decision block 5616.
At decision block 5616, a determination is made as to whether there are any remaining groups in the present type (type 1). If so, flow proceeds to block 5614. Otherwise, flow proceeds to block 5618.
At block 5614, the next group within type 1 is opened, and flow proceeds back to block 5606 for presentation of another 2×4 grid. The student is required to pass any 2×4 grid, before they are allowed to advance to block 5612 for presentation of a 4×8 grid. If they cannot pass any of the 2×4 grids in type 1, a next group is opened, in type 2, and flow proceeds to block 5620.
At block 5612, a 4×8 grid set of trials is presented to the student, in type 1. Flow then proceeds to decision block 5613.
At decision block 5613 a determination is made as to whether the student has correctly passed 90% of the trials (or 29 out of 32 trials). They are given 3 chances to pass this grid. If they do, flow proceeds to decision block 5616. If they do not, flow still proceeds to decision block 5616, but the present unit remains open.
At block 5618, the next group is opened in type 2 (picture+text+aural). Flow then proceeds to block 5620.
At block 5620, a 2×4 grid is presented for the new group in type 2. Flow then proceeds to decision block 5622.
At decision block 5622, a determination is made as to whether the student has passed this grid. For this 2×4 grid, the student is given three chances to pass at 100% (or 8 out of 8 trials). If they do not, flow proceeds to decision block 5624. However, if they pass, flow proceeds to block 5623.
At decision block 5624, a new 2×4 grid is presented from another group in the same category. The student is given 3 opportunities to pass this grid. Whether they pass or not, flow proceeds to block 5628. However, if they pass, the present group is closed, whereas if they do not pass, the present group remains open for completion later.
At block 5628, the next group is opened. If all of the groups have been closed for the present type in type 2 (PTA), then another group is opened for the next type (TA). Flow then proceeds back to block 5620 for presentation of another 2×4 grid for the new group and/or type.
At block 5623, a presentation of a new 4×8 grid is presented. Flow then proceeds to decision block 5626.
At decision block 5626, a determination is made as to whether the student has passed the 4×8 grid. As above, the student is given three chances to pass the 4×8 grid at 90% (or 29 out of 32). If they do not, the present unit remains open and flow proceeds to block 5628. Otherwise, flow proceeds to block 5627.
At block 5627, a new 4×8 grid is presented. This grid is stage 2 of type 2 (text+aural). Flow then proceeds to decision block 5630.
At decision block 5630, a determination is made as to whether the student correctly passed this grid. As above, for a 4×8 grid, the student is given three chances to pass at 90% (or 29 out of 32). If they do not, the unit remains open, and flow proceeds to block 5628. Otherwise, flow proceeds to block 5632.
At block 5632, a timed fluency round is presented to the student for the present unit. Upon completion, flow proceeds to block 5628.
Program Set—Reading 2
Exercise—6: Ant Antics
The goal of this exercise is to improve vocabulary skills, syntax skills, and sentence-level comprehension. The student is asked to choose which one of four sentences (or phrases) best describes a picture. The sentences sample the basic grammatical structures of spoken English as mastered by the second grade. Foil sentences use vocabulary that is relevant to the picture, but say something that is not true about the picture, often by changing word order and/or word. To respond correctly, students must focus on the syntactic features of the sentences. Because this task requires students to carefully read, analyze, and compare the possible answers, it exercises working memory and logic skills as well as syntactic abilities.
The participant sees one picture along with four sentences (or phrases), and must pick the sentence (or phrase) that correctly describes something in the picture. Sentences will be created based on 24 selected syntactic forms. These forms are syntactic constructions that typically develop between ages 3 and 9.
Difficulty will be manipulated along 2 primary dimensions, reading difficulty and syntactic complexity. The dimension of reading difficulty is a combination of non-grammatical factors: sentence length and vocabulary. Sentence length increases across two levels: short and long. Short sentences are the minimal length for that sentence structure: on average 3-6 words long. Long sentences are the minimal length for that structure plus 1 to 3 extra words: on average 4-8 words long. The extra words consist of adjectives, complements, and prepositional phrases, in order to make sentences longer with minimal impact on syntactic complexity. Vocabulary increases across two levels: easy and hard. Easy vocabulary items were based on a restricted set of 74 familiar and/or easily decodable Kindergarten level words, designed to minimize the burdens of decoding and word recognition. Hard vocabulary items were based on an unrestricted set of 1st and 2nd grade level words. No items will use both long sentences and hard vocabulary.
Syntactic complexity increases across 8 levels. The age of acquisition for the targeted sentence structures increases across syntactic levels from an average of 2.8 to 5.5. In addition, the average minimal length (shortest sentence that can have the target structure) increases from approximately 3 words at the lowest levels (e.g., “The cats read.”) to approximately 6 words at the highest levels (e.g., “The cow that is sad is walking.”).
There are eight grammatical levels and three reading difficulty levels (sentence length+vocabulary). Because individual students will respond differently to these two dimensions of difficulty, it is possible for students to proceed through these levels following different sequences (see “Progression” section). There are 24 forms—three per grammatical difficulty level. Reading difficulty refers to the combination of a sentence's length/vocabulary. There are 3 levels of reading difficulty: short/easy, long/easy, and short/hard. There are 24 units—one for each combination of grammatical level and reading difficulty level. As shown below, syntactic difficulty increases moving left to right across columns, with reading difficulty increasing moving down the rows.
All students will begin with unit 1, with all units marked “open.” If a unit is passed, that unit is marked “closed,” and the student proceeds to the next row in the same column (i.e., if unit y is passed, move to unit y+8.) If a unit in row 3 is passed, move to the next open unit. If a unit is not passed, repeat the same unit. If a unit is not passed on the third attempt, it should be marked as “attempted,” and the student should make a plateau-based transition to the next open unit. When the student transitions from unit 24 (i.e., there are no open units, because all have been marked closed or attempted) those units not yet passed should be marked open again, and the student should return to the incomplete units, following the same progression rules.
A unit includes all trials from a given level (12 trials). All the trials from a unit are presented before any trials are evaluated. At that point, the trials are evaluated for criterion. Each syntactic structure within a level is evaluated separately, and the student must correctly answer 3 of the 4 trials for each of the three structures to pass a unit. Students cannot pass individual syntactic structures, rather, they must reach criterion for all three structures in a single evaluation cycle and pass the entire unit.
As the student begins taking trials in unit 1, the syntactic structures and items within that unit will be chosen randomly. Once all trials in all syntactic categories have been presented the unit is evaluated. If the student attains the passing criterion they will advance to a unit with the same grammatical structure but more challenging reading level, otherwise the same unit is repeated, with the trials presented in a new random order.
Referring to
Referring now to
As mentioned above, the present exercise includes 3 levels of reading difficulty, and 8 levels of grammar complexity. For each level of reading difficulty (level 1=short/easy, level 2=long/easy, level 3=short/hard) there are 3 types of structure (ID 1=short/easy (4 trials), ID 2=long/easy (4 trials), and ID 3=short/hard (4 trials)). A unit=1 level of reading difficulty×1 grammar complexity for a total of 24 units. The content is presented visually only (and textually), no audio.
Referring now to
At block 5904, the reading difficulty (RD) is set to 1, the grammar complexity (GC) is set to 1, and the Unit is set to 1. Flow then proceeds to block 5906.
At block 5906, a trial is presented. In one embodiment, there are 12 available trials for each unit, four from each of three ID's. The method randomly selects one of these 12 for presentation to the student, as shown in
At decision block 5908, a determination is made as to whether another trial remains. As just mentioned, there are 12 trials within each unit. The loop between block 5906 and decision block 5908 continues for those 12 trials. If another trial remains, flow proceeds back to block 5906. Otherwise, flow proceeds to decision block 5910.
At decision block 5910 a determination is made as to whether the subject passed the unit. In one embodiment, the student must past 3 out of 4 trials for each ID in a unit. If they do, flow proceeds to decision block 5914. If not, flow proceeds to decision block 5912.
At decision block 5912, a determination is made as to whether the student has tried to pass the unit 3 times. If not, flow proceeds back to block 5906 where the unit is repeated. However, if the student has attempted the unit unsuccessfully 3 times, flow proceeds to block 5916.
At block 5916, the present unit is marked uncompleted (or open). Flow then proceeds to decision block 5914.
At decision block 5914, a determination is made as to whether the present unit is the last unit in the exercise. If not, flow proceeds to block 5918. However, if the present unit is the last unit in the exercise, flow proceeds to block 5920.
At block 5918, the unit is incremented. Then, flow proceeds back to block 5906 for presentation of a trial in the next unit. This loop continues until all units have been presented.
At block 5920, all units have been presented. But, if any units were not passed, they remain open. These units are repeated, per the above, along 3 chances for each open unit, until all units have been completed.
What has been described above, in the provisional applications which were incorporated by reference, in the drawings, claims and attached appendix, are two sets, each set having multiple exercises which taken alone, and in combination, provide a methodology for helping students cognitive skills in reading and learning. Several embodiments have been illustrated in the described exercises for accomplishing this purpose. However, one skilled in the art will appreciate that modifications to scenes, presentation form, and even content, can be made without departing from the scope of the present invention. Further, what has been described is a methodology for use on a computing device. But, any device capable of producing visual and auditory stimulus, along with a mechanism for recording selections and feedback could be used. That is, the methodology taught in the present application should not be limited to use on the computing device described in
Finally, those skilled in the art should appreciate that they can readily use the disclosed conception and specific embodiments as a basis for designing or modifying other structures for carrying out the same purposes of the present invention without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
Claims
1. A computer-implemented method for improving vocabulary skills, syntax skills, and sentence-level comprehension in a person, the method comprising:
- providing a stimulus picture set comprising a plurality of stimulus pictures;
- presenting a stimulus picture from the stimulus picture set to the person via a computing device;
- presenting a plurality of phrases to the person, wherein one of the plurality of phrases best describes the stimulus picture;
- requiring the person to select a phrase from the plurality of phrases that best describes the stimulus picture;
- performing said presenting the stimulus picture, said presenting the plurality of phrases, and said requiring, for each stimulus picture and corresponding plurality of phrases in a unit, wherein the unit is comprised in a plurality of units, each unit comprising a respective subset of the stimulus pictures in the stimulus picture set and corresponding pluralities of phrases;
- determining if the person selected the phrase that best describes the stimulus picture for each stimulus picture in the unit; and
- repeating said presenting the stimulus picture, said presenting the plurality of phrases, said requiring, said performing, and said determining for each unit in the plurality of units;
- wherein said repeating improves vocabulary skills, syntax skills, and sentence-level comprehension in the person.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the plurality of phrases comprises one or more foil phrases that use vocabulary that is relevant to the presented stimulus picture, but that does not correctly describe the stimulus picture.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein each unit comprises a respective plurality of trials, each trial comprising said presenting a stimulus picture, said presenting a plurality of phrases, and said requiring, with respect to a respective stimulus picture and corresponding plurality of phrases.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein each unit is characterized by a reading difficulty level and a syntactic difficulty level.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein the person is allowed to progress through syntactic difficulty levels and reading difficulty levels independently.
6. The method of claim 4, wherein the reading difficulty level is based on:
- vocabulary difficulty of the phrases of the unit; and
- length of the phrases of the unit;
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the syntactic difficulty level is one of a plurality of syntactic difficulty levels, each syntactic difficulty level associated with a plurality of syntactic structures, wherein each syntactic structure comprises a respective plurality of syntactic items.
8. The method of claim 7, wherein the syntactic structures and syntactic items within a unit are selected randomly for trials in the unit.
9. The method of claim 7, wherein said determining if the person selected the phrase that best describes the stimulus picture for each stimulus picture in the unit comprises:
- separately evaluating the person's selections in trials with respect to each syntactic structure within the syntactic difficulty level of the unit;
- wherein passing a unit comprises correctly selecting the phrase for a specified percentage of trials with respect to each syntactic structure within the syntactic difficulty level of the unit.
10. The method of claim 9, further comprising:
- if the person passes a unit, advancing to a unit with the same syntactic complexity level, but with increased reading difficulty; and
- if the person fails a unit, repeating the unit with the trials of the unit presented in a new random order.
11. The method of claim 10,
- wherein an open unit comprises a unit that has not been passed;
- wherein all units are initially open units, and wherein said repeating said presenting the stimulus picture, said presenting the plurality of phrases, said requiring, said performing, and said determining for each unit in the plurality of units comprises: performing trials in each open unit of the plurality of open units.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein said performing trials in each open unit of the plurality of open units comprises:
- setting a current unit to a first unit of the plurality of units, wherein the first unit has a first reading difficulty level and a first syntactic complexity level;
- performing trials for the current unit.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein said performing trials in each open unit of the plurality of open units further comprises:
- if the person does not pass the current unit, repeating the current unit until the person passes the current unit, or the person fails the current unit a specified number of times; and if the person fails the current unit the specified number of times, keeping the current unit open for later presentation to the person.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein said performing trials in each open unit of the plurality of open units further comprises:
- if the person passes the current unit, closing the current unit.
15. The method of claim 14, wherein said performing trials in each open unit of the plurality of open units further comprises:
- if there are more units in the plurality of units, incrementing the current unit to a next unit of the plurality of units; and performing trials in the current unit.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein said performing trials in each open unit of the plurality of open units further comprises:
- if all units have been presented, and there are further open units, for each unit in the further open units: setting the current unit to a next open unit of the further open units; and performing trials in the current unit; if the person passes the current unit, closing the current unit; else, keeping the current unit open for later presentation to the person.
17. The method of claim 11, wherein said performing trials in each open unit of the plurality of open units is performed over a plurality of sessions, and wherein each successive session begins approximately where a previous session ends.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein the sessions occur a specified number times each day, for a specified number of days.
19. The method of claim 1, wherein said presenting the stimulus picture, said presenting the plurality of phrases, said requiring, said performing, and said determining are performed via a graphical user interface (GUI) displayed on a display of the computing device.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein the GUI displays two or more of:
- a student indicator;
- a time indicator;
- an initiation button, whereby the person invokes said presenting the stimulus picture; and
- a count indicator.
21. The method of claim 20, wherein the GUI further displays a main character, wherein the main character performs said presenting the stimulus picture.
22. The method of claim 21, wherein the GUI further displays one or more secondary characters, wherein the one or more secondary characters perform said presenting the plurality of phrases.
23. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- playing a sound indicating the correctness or incorrectness of the selection.
24. The method of claim 23, wherein said playing the sound comprises:
- playing the sound via headphones attached to the computing device.
25. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- if the selection is incorrect, graying out the incorrect phrases; and highlighting the correct phrase.
26. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- awarding points based on the correctness of the selected phrase.
27. The method of claim 1, wherein one or more of the plurality of phrases comprises a sentence.
28. The method of claim 1, wherein said requiring the person to select a phrase from the plurality of phrases comprises requiring the person to perform one or more of:
- selecting the phrase with a pointing device;
- selecting a button indicating the phrase in the GUI with the pointing device; and
- pressing one or more keys on a keyboard coupled to the computing device to indicate selection of the phrase.
29. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
- performing said repeating a plurality of times to improve vocabulary skills, syntax skills, and sentence-level comprehension in the person.
30. A computer-readable memory medium that stores program instructions for improving vocabulary skills, syntax skills, and sentence-level comprehension in a person, wherein the program instructions are executable to perform:
- providing a stimulus picture set comprising a plurality of stimulus pictures;
- presenting a stimulus picture from the stimulus picture set to the person via a computing device;
- presenting a plurality of phrases to the person, wherein one of the plurality of phrases best describes the stimulus picture;
- requiring the person to select a phrase from the plurality of phrases that best describes the stimulus picture;
- performing said presenting the stimulus picture, said presenting the plurality of phrases, and said requiring, for each stimulus picture and corresponding plurality of phrases in a unit, wherein the unit is comprised in a plurality of units, each unit comprising a respective subset of the stimulus pictures in the stimulus picture set and corresponding pluralities of phrases;
- determining if the person selected the phrase that best describes the stimulus picture for each stimulus picture in the unit; and
- repeating said presenting the stimulus picture, said presenting the plurality of phrases, said requiring, said performing, and said determining for each unit in the plurality of units;
- wherein said repeating improves vocabulary skills, syntax skills, and sentence-level comprehension in the person.
Type: Application
Filed: Mar 3, 2006
Publication Date: Nov 23, 2006
Applicant: Scientific Learning Corporation (Oakland, CA)
Inventors: Logan De Ley (Alameda, CA), William Jenkins (Pacifica, CA), Virginia Mann (Dana Point, CA), Steven Miller (Pacifica, CA)
Application Number: 11/367,779
International Classification: G09B 5/00 (20060101);