DECODING
Oral Language
Group Reading
Group reading is a common practice in guided reading. Students follow along with each other and remain on the same page of a book while each student reads one at a time in turn. The purpose of group reading is to teach reading skills. Students must be able to decode words and to read fluently.
Tooltip
Description of field
Auditory Discrimination and Hearing, Communication
Text to Speech
Auditory Discrimination and Hearing, All Purpose
Hearing Aid
Expressive, Receptive, Semantics, Vocabulary, Background Information
Symbol Library
Auditory Discrimination and Hearing, Classroom
Soundfield System
Expressive, Receptive, Semantics, Vocabulary, Background Information
Scalable Vocabulary
Expressive, Speech (Articulation, Fluency, and Voice)
Augmented or Alternatie Communication (AAC)
Auditory Discrimination and Hearing, Classroom
FM or Infrared System
Receptive, Semantics, Vocabulary
E-Dictionary
Word Problems
Word problems present information students must use to find the solution as written text. Word problems are complex to master and involve a number of academic and cognitive skills, including reading, numerical operations and applications, organization, and memory skills, among others. The National Council of Teachers of Mathematics has identified problem solving as one of the five process standards that are necessary for students to master because without problem solving, students only learn how to compute, rather than why and when to use these computational mathematics skills (Browder et al., 2017). Students with Learning Disabilities often struggle the most with word problems.
Vision
Assistive technologies exist to help individuals with limited vision or complete vision loss to read text. While users may rely mainly on one of the available assistive technology, many users report using a combination of the available assistive technologies depending on the length, organization, and context of the text file that they are required to read (D'Andrea, 2012).