Identification of children with reading difficulties: Cheap can be adequate

Publikation: KonferencebidragPaperForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Identification of children with reading difficulties: Cheap can be adequate. / Poulsen, Mads; Nielsen, Anne-Mette Veber.

2012. Paper præsenteret ved Nineteenth meeting of the Society for the Scientific Study of Reading, Montreal, Canada.

Publikation: KonferencebidragPaperForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Poulsen, M & Nielsen, A-MV 2012, 'Identification of children with reading difficulties: Cheap can be adequate', Paper fremlagt ved Nineteenth meeting of the Society for the Scientific Study of Reading, Montreal, Canada, 11/07/2012 - 14/07/2012.

APA

Poulsen, M., & Nielsen, A-M. V. (2012). Identification of children with reading difficulties: Cheap can be adequate. Paper præsenteret ved Nineteenth meeting of the Society for the Scientific Study of Reading, Montreal, Canada.

Vancouver

Poulsen M, Nielsen A-MV. Identification of children with reading difficulties: Cheap can be adequate. 2012. Paper præsenteret ved Nineteenth meeting of the Society for the Scientific Study of Reading, Montreal, Canada.

Author

Poulsen, Mads ; Nielsen, Anne-Mette Veber. / Identification of children with reading difficulties: Cheap can be adequate. Paper præsenteret ved Nineteenth meeting of the Society for the Scientific Study of Reading, Montreal, Canada.

Bibtex

@conference{03c06eb769054f78a30700a45b192c1d,
title = "Identification of children with reading difficulties: Cheap can be adequate",
abstract = "Classification of reading difficulties: Cheap screening can be accuratePurpose: Three factors are important for identification of students in need of remedial instruction: accuracy, timeliness, and cost. The identification has to be accurate to be of any use, the identification has to be timely to allow for optimal remediation, and the procedure should preferably be inexpensive to allow wide-spread adoption. These criteria are, however, often in conflict: Early screening may be less accurate than late screening, and comprehensive and expensive testing is possibly more accurate than simple, inexpensive testing. The present study investigated the classification accuracy of three screening models varying in timeliness and cost.Method: We compared the ROC statistics of three logistic models for predicting end of Grade 2 reading difficulties in a sample of 164 students: 1) an early, comprehensive model using a battery of Grade 0 tests, including phoneme awareness, rapid naming, and paired associate learning, 2) a late, comprehensive model adding reading measures from January of Grade 1, and 3) a late, inexpensive model using only group-administered reading measures from January of Grade 1.Results: The late models provided acceptable classification with little difference in classification accuracy between the comprehensive and inexpensive models (AUC = .93 vs .91). The late models provided better classification than the early model (AUC = .82).Conclusion: Cheap group-administered testing in mid Grade 1 provided good classification. Choice of early intervention based on Grade 0 results should take into account the potential high cost of many false positives.",
author = "Mads Poulsen and Nielsen, {Anne-Mette Veber}",
year = "2012",
month = jul,
day = "11",
language = "English",
note = "null ; Conference date: 11-07-2012 Through 14-07-2012",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Identification of children with reading difficulties: Cheap can be adequate

AU - Poulsen, Mads

AU - Nielsen, Anne-Mette Veber

PY - 2012/7/11

Y1 - 2012/7/11

N2 - Classification of reading difficulties: Cheap screening can be accuratePurpose: Three factors are important for identification of students in need of remedial instruction: accuracy, timeliness, and cost. The identification has to be accurate to be of any use, the identification has to be timely to allow for optimal remediation, and the procedure should preferably be inexpensive to allow wide-spread adoption. These criteria are, however, often in conflict: Early screening may be less accurate than late screening, and comprehensive and expensive testing is possibly more accurate than simple, inexpensive testing. The present study investigated the classification accuracy of three screening models varying in timeliness and cost.Method: We compared the ROC statistics of three logistic models for predicting end of Grade 2 reading difficulties in a sample of 164 students: 1) an early, comprehensive model using a battery of Grade 0 tests, including phoneme awareness, rapid naming, and paired associate learning, 2) a late, comprehensive model adding reading measures from January of Grade 1, and 3) a late, inexpensive model using only group-administered reading measures from January of Grade 1.Results: The late models provided acceptable classification with little difference in classification accuracy between the comprehensive and inexpensive models (AUC = .93 vs .91). The late models provided better classification than the early model (AUC = .82).Conclusion: Cheap group-administered testing in mid Grade 1 provided good classification. Choice of early intervention based on Grade 0 results should take into account the potential high cost of many false positives.

AB - Classification of reading difficulties: Cheap screening can be accuratePurpose: Three factors are important for identification of students in need of remedial instruction: accuracy, timeliness, and cost. The identification has to be accurate to be of any use, the identification has to be timely to allow for optimal remediation, and the procedure should preferably be inexpensive to allow wide-spread adoption. These criteria are, however, often in conflict: Early screening may be less accurate than late screening, and comprehensive and expensive testing is possibly more accurate than simple, inexpensive testing. The present study investigated the classification accuracy of three screening models varying in timeliness and cost.Method: We compared the ROC statistics of three logistic models for predicting end of Grade 2 reading difficulties in a sample of 164 students: 1) an early, comprehensive model using a battery of Grade 0 tests, including phoneme awareness, rapid naming, and paired associate learning, 2) a late, comprehensive model adding reading measures from January of Grade 1, and 3) a late, inexpensive model using only group-administered reading measures from January of Grade 1.Results: The late models provided acceptable classification with little difference in classification accuracy between the comprehensive and inexpensive models (AUC = .93 vs .91). The late models provided better classification than the early model (AUC = .82).Conclusion: Cheap group-administered testing in mid Grade 1 provided good classification. Choice of early intervention based on Grade 0 results should take into account the potential high cost of many false positives.

M3 - Paper

Y2 - 11 July 2012 through 14 July 2012

ER -

ID: 38462727