Using Assistive Technology for Your Struggling Readers

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“What are you [teachers] doing right now so that your students have unhindered access to grade-level curriculum each day?” is a question often asked by Dana Blackaby, Dyslexia Specialist at The Academy at Nola Dunn in Texas. During a recent edWeb.net edWebinar, Blackaby and two student-led tech crew members from The Academy at Nola Dunn, 5th-grade student, Gavin, and 4th-grade student, Marley, explained that students with disabilities cannot access grade-level curricula 100% by themselves if they are not yet reading at grade level. Eighty-five percent of what we learn we learn is by listening and students can listen and comprehend two grade levels above their reading levels. Reading while listening improves comprehension by 76% and simultaneously listening increases reading accuracy by 52%. Assistive technology, especially audiobooks, provide both multisensory reading and writing experiences and enhance word recognition. These tools allow students to allocate cognitive resources to comprehension rather than decoding. Struggling readers themselves, Gavin and Marley, embraced an opportunity from Blackaby to become assistive technology leaders and trainers in their district. They concurred with Blackaby that using assistive technology significantly increases attention span resulting in the ability to focus on listening and comprehension.

Bridging the Gap and Eliminating the Barriers

Developing struggling readers into confident grade-level readers cannot be accomplished by reducing the number or level of books students with disabilities are required to read. Assistive technology is a means to bridge the gap for students who have a print disability and have not yet mastered reading independently on grade level. Eye reading and listening to quality literature by a human voice (ear reading) are not exclusive but should be used inclusively depending on the task. Adding assistive technology accommodations to students’ IEP and 504 plans greatly reduce the effect of students’ disabilities by fostering independence in learning. There are many reading programs available such as Snap&Read, Chrome Speak, Natural Reader and SpeakIt that can read the accessible and inaccessible text to students.

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At The Academy at Nola Dunn, reading assistive technologies such as text-to-speech (TTS) and audiobooks are used daily by students both in and out of school. Audiobooks provide human-read or digital-read options, and resources such as Learning Ally, Bookshare, Audible, OverDrive, Hoopla, and Library of Congress offer multisensory reading experiences where struggling readers have access to grade-level and beyond quality content. Cognitively, writing is the most challenging task students are asked to perform as they struggle with taking all their knowledge and putting it down on paper. For this purpose, word prediction and speech-to-text (STT) software have been invaluable for students struggling with spelling. Vocabulary builder, word banks, and topic dictionaries assist with memory trigger on words and topics. 

Instilling Confidence

The answer to the question, “When should students access assistive technology?” is “As often as they need it.” When assistive technology is used anytime, anywhere for homework, lengthy reading assignments, and novel studies, students become the driver of their learning in grade-level curricula such as math, reading, social studies, and science. Having at-home access to assistive technology tools, students can read long emails, journals, text, and pleasure books that excite and engage. Giving students the reins of the technology sets them free to be independent learners and not reliant on teachers, peers, or support staff to read a word or help on the oral admin of tests. Struggling readers prefer to use the assistive technology options available to them because it improves engagement, understanding, and fluency, and expands vocabulary.  Through assistive technology, students can share what they know and write what they want to write and not what they are able to write. Using assistive technology tools, students at The Academy at Nola Dunn have become entirely independent in their learning and shown immeasurable growth in competency and confidence in their reading and writing ability.

This edWeb broadcast was sponsored by Learning Ally.

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This article was modified and published by EdScoop.

About the Presenter

Dana Blackaby is a dyslexia specialist at The Academy at Nola Dunn in Texas whose goal is to empower students by instilling confidence, skills, and hope in students with learning differences. Dana’s students have finished in the top 10 in two nationwide reading competitions and have been featured in multiple news outlets via newspapers, Twitter, Facebook, and the Dallas–Fort Worth ABC affiliate, WFAA. In addition, several of her students are a part of a student-led tech crew that travels from school to school providing training on assistive technology for teachers and administrators in their district. Dana holds a master’s degree in teaching.

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Empowering Struggling Readers is a free professional learning community on edWeb.net that provides educators, administrators, special educators, curriculum leaders, and librarians a place to collaborate on how to turn struggling readers into thriving students.

Learning Ally is a leading education solutions organization committed to transforming the lives of struggling learners. The Learning Ally Audiobook Solution is a proven reading accommodation comprised of human-read audiobooks, student centric features and a suite of teacher resources. Used in more than 17,000 schools, this solution successfully helps students with reading deficits become engaged learners and reach their academic potential.