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Steven L. Meisler – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Reading is a complex, uniquely human invention for communication through print. It is a critical ability for making progress in education. Students with reading difficulties, the most common learning disability, struggle with reading fluency and accuracy. Skilled reading is enabled by the coordination of a network of brain regions interconnected…
Descriptors: Reading Difficulties, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Reading Skills, Research Methodology
Lindsay M. Swartzendruber – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Executive functioning has been a buzz word in education for a few years, especially since the COVID-19 pandemic. The research around executive functioning is exploding, as teachers are seeking to support students entering their classrooms with what seems like a wider variety of needs and less independence than ever before. Many districts are…
Descriptors: Middle School Teachers, Middle School Students, Executive Function, Educational Practices
Gifford, Gerald Kevin – ProQuest LLC, 2018
Successful education of young students is a demanding task that requires attention to adaptive teaching methodologies, and physiological learning systems described in neuroscience. This dissertation evaluated correlational relationships between cerebellum motor coordination, and academic proficiency in mathematics and English language arts (ELA)…
Descriptors: Neurosciences, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Correlation, Academic Ability
Jenifer Juengling-Sudkamp – ProQuest LLC, 2012
Background: Approximately 1 million people in the United States suffer from aphasia and > 50% of those people may demonstrate recurrent perseverations. No consensus has been forthcoming on whether: (1) a therapy that directly confronts clients with imminent pre-articulatory automatisms (the perseverations); or (2) a more typical…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Intervention, Naming, Therapy
Rusinko, Judith E. – ProQuest LLC, 2011
Multisensory Structured Language Instruction has been used for decades by clinicians and practitioners as an intervention for teaching students with dyslexia. Multisensory Structured Language Instruction uses the integration of multiple senses (visual, auditory, and kinesthetic/tactile) simultaneously to teach literacy. Although the anecdotal…
Descriptors: Models, Literacy Education, Multisensory Learning, Teaching Methods