International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology | 2019
Can an app a day keep illiteracy away? Piloting the efficacy of Reading Doctor apps for preschoolers with developmental language disorder
Abstract
Abstract Purpose: This study investigated the efficacy of three Reading Doctor® (RD) apps in raising letter-sound aptitude, phoneme awareness and early decoding ability among children with heightened risk for reading difficulties due to developmental language disorder (DLD). Method: Twenty-four 4-year-old children with DLD, identified through baseline speech-language assessments, in their final term of pre-school participated in this study. In the experimental condition, 14 children participated twice a week in three RD apps for 8 weeks. In the control condition, 10 children engaged in their usual pre-school programme inclusive of teacher-delivered small-group activities related to letters and sounds taught in a non-systematic and non-explicit fashion. Result: No significant between-group differences were identified prior to the implementation of RD. Following instruction, pre-school children in the experimental condition performed significantly better than children in the control condition in phoneme blending (p\u2009<\u20090.001, d\u2009=\u20091.86), phoneme segmentation (p\u2009<\u20090.001, d\u2009=\u20091.15) and letter-sound recognition (p< 0.001, d\u2009=\u20091.92), as well as in the number of correct phoneme–grapheme conversions during early decoding attempts (p\u2009=\u20090.025, d\u2009=\u20091.08). Conclusion: Initial evidence suggests that RD software may support code-based reading readiness among pre-school children with DLD prior to school entry.