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Dive into the research topics where Elizabeth Swanson is active.

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Featured researches published by Elizabeth Swanson.


American Educational Research Journal | 2011

Efficacy of Collaborative Strategic Reading With Middle School Students

Sharon Vaughn; Janette K. Klingner; Elizabeth Swanson; Alison G. Boardman; Greg Roberts; Sarojani S. Mohammed; Stephanie J. Stillman-Spisak

The authors conducted an experimental study to examine the effects of collaborative strategic reading and metacognitive strategic learning on the reading comprehension of students in seventh- and eighth-grade English/language arts classes in two sites (Texas, Colorado) and in three school districts. Students were randomly assigned to classes and then classes were randomly assigned to treatment or business-as-usual comparison groups. If a teacher had an uneven number of classes, we assigned extra classes to treatment. The total number of classes randomized was 61, with 34 treatment and 27 comparison. Treatment students received a multicomponent reading comprehension instruction (collaborative strategic reading) from their English/language arts/reading teachers that included teaching students to apply comprehension strategies in collaborative groups for 18 weeks, with approximately two sessions per week. Findings indicated significant differences in favor of the treatment students on the Gates-MacGinitie Reading Comprehension Test but not on reading fluency.


Journal of Learning Disabilities | 2006

A Synthesis of Spelling and Reading Interventions and Their Effects on the Spelling Outcomes of Students with LD

Jeanne Wanzek; Sharon Vaughn; Jade Wexler; Elizabeth Swanson; Meghan Edmonds; Ae-Hwa Kim

Previous research studies examining the effects of spelling and reading interventions on the spelling outcomes of students with learning disabilities (LD) are synthesized. An extensive search of the professional literature between 1995 and 2003 yielded a total of 19 intervention studies that provided spelling and reading interventions to students with LD and measured spelling outcomes. Findings revealed that spelling outcomes were consistently improved following spelling interventions that included explicit instruction with multiple practice opportunities and immediate corrective feedback after the word was misspelled. Furthermore, evidence from spelling interventions that employed assistive technology aimed at spelling in written compositions indicated positive effects on spelling outcomes.


Journal of Learning Disabilities | 2011

A Synthesis of Read-Aloud Interventions on Early Reading Outcomes Among Preschool Through Third Graders at Risk for Reading Difficulties

Elizabeth Swanson; Sharon Vaughn; Jeanne Wanzek; Yaacov Petscher; Jennifer Heckert; Christie L. Cavanaugh; Guliz Kraft; Kathryn Klingler Tackett

A synthesis and meta-analysis of the extant research on the effects of storybook read-aloud interventions for children at risk for reading difficulties ages 3 to 8 is provided. A total of 29 studies met criteria for the synthesis, with 18 studies providing sufficient data for inclusion in the meta-analysis. Read-aloud instruction has been examined using dialogic reading; repeated reading of stories; story reading with limited questioning before, during, and/or after reading; computer-assisted story reading; and story reading with extended vocabulary activities. Significant, positive effects on children’s language, phonological awareness, print concepts, comprehension, and vocabulary outcomes were found. Despite the positive effects for read-aloud interventions, only a small amount of outcome variance was accounted for by intervention type.


Journal of Special Education | 2013

Intervention Fidelity in Special and General Education Research Journals

Elizabeth Swanson; Jeanne Wanzek; Christa Haring; Stephen Ciullo; Lisa V. McCulley

Treatment fidelity reporting practices are described for journals that published general and special education intervention research with high impact factors from 2005 through 2009. The authors reviewed research articles, reported the proportion of intervention studies that described fidelity measurement, detailed the components of fidelity measurement reported, and determined whether the components of fidelity reported differed based on the research design, the type of intervention, or the number of intervention sessions. Results indicate that even intervention research articles in high-quality general and special education journals inconsistently report fidelity (less than 70% of the articles). Authors of single-case studies most frequently reported the collection of intervention fidelity data (81.3% of articles, compared with 67.4% of treatment-comparison study articles). Of the 67% of articles that provided information about intervention fidelity procedure, only 9.8% provided data about the quality of the treatment intervention.


Learning Disability Quarterly | 2008

Observing Reading Instruction for Students with Learning Disabilities: A Synthesis:

Elizabeth Swanson

This article synthesizes previous research studies examining reading instruction for students with learning disabilities (LD) through classroom observation methods. An extensive search of the research literature between 1980 and 2005 yielded 21 observation studies. Findings revealed that reading instruction for students with LD is generally of low quality, with little to no explicit instruction in phonics or comprehension strategy. Findings were consistent, whether studies were conducted more than 10 years ago or within the last few years. Estimates of time students with LD spend reading orally or silently are low. The most frequently observed grouping structure was whole-class instruction, regardless of the setting.


Learning Disability Quarterly | 2012

Special Education Teachers’ Perceptions and Instructional Practices in Response to Intervention Implementation:

Elizabeth Swanson; Michael Solis; Stephen Ciullo; John William McKenna

This study reports on the perceptions and instructional practices of Grades 3 through 5 special education teachers in a school district that implemented a multitiered response to intervention (RTI) framework for the previous 5 years. The authors used focus groups and interviews to examine special education teachers’ perceptions of RTI. In addition, the authors observed the mathematics and reading instruction that these teachers provided. This study contributes to the literature by presenting a qualitative, in-depth description of special education teachers’ perceptions related to RTI implementation at the upper elementary level.


Exceptional Children | 2010

Effectiveness of a Supplemental Early Reading Intervention Scaled up in Multiple Schools

Carolyn A. Denton; Kim Nimon; Patricia G. Mathes; Elizabeth Swanson; Caroline Kethley; Terri Kurz; Minyi Shih

This effectiveness study examined a supplemental reading intervention that may be appropriate as one component of a response-to-intervention (RTI) system. First-grade students in 31 schools who were at risk for reading difficulties were randomly assigned to receive Responsive Reading Instruction (RRI; Denton, 2001; Denton & Hocker, 2006; n = 182) or typical school practice (TSP; n = 40). About 43% of the TSP students received an alternate school-provided supplemental reading intervention. Results indicated that the RRI group had significantly higher outcomes than the TSP group on multiple measures of reading. About 91% of RRI students and 79% of TSP students met word reading criteria for adequate intervention response, but considerably fewer met a fluency benchmark.


Reading & Writing Quarterly | 2016

Literacy and Text Reading in Middle and High School Social Studies and English Language Arts Classrooms.

Elizabeth Swanson; Jeanne Wanzek; Lisa V. McCulley; Stephanie J. Stillman-Spisak; Sharon Vaughn; Deborah C. Simmons; Melissa Fogarty; Angela Hairrell

This study reports vocabulary and reading comprehension instructional practices implemented in middle and high school social studies and language arts classrooms. It also describes text reading practices. We conducted 137 observations of 11 social studies and 9 language arts teachers over the course of 1 academic year. We observed instructional practices supportive of vocabulary and reading comprehension to differing degrees in social studies and language arts. The proportion of time spent reading text was roughly the same across the 2 subjects, with differences by text type, reading mode, and grade level within both subject areas.


Journal of Learning Disabilities | 2014

A Synthesis and Meta-Analysis of Reading Interventions Using Social Studies Content for Students With Learning Disabilities:

Elizabeth Swanson; Angela Hairrell; Shawn C. Kent; Stephen Ciullo; Jeanne Wanzek; Sharon Vaughn

A synthesis and meta-analysis of the extant research on the effects of reading interventions delivered using social studies content for students with learning disabilities in kindergarten through Grade 12 is provided. A total of 27 studies met criteria for the synthesis, with 16 studies providing sufficient data for inclusion in the meta-analysis. Reading interventions implemented within the context of social studies have employed the use of graphic organizers, mnemonics, reading and answering questions, guided notes, and multicomponent comprehension instruction. The overall mean effect size for interventions included in the meta-analysis was 1.02, indicating that reading interventions delivered using social studies content have a substantial positive effect on outcomes among students with learning disabilities.


Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness | 2013

Collaborative Strategic Reading: Findings From Experienced Implementers

Sharon Vaughn; Greg Roberts; Janette K. Klingner; Elizabeth Swanson; Alison G. Boardman; Stephanie J. Stillman-Spisak; Sarojani S. Mohammed; Audrey Leroux

Abstract This study examined the effects and fidelity of collaborative strategic reading (CSR) implemented by experienced CSR teachers (participated in previous study; Vaughn et al., 2011) on the reading comprehension outcomes of students in English/Language Arts (ELA) or Reading classes. Eligible teachers (12 of 17; others reassigned to teach grades/subjects not eligible for inclusion) in middle schools in Texas and Colorado who participated in the previous year in a study examining the effects of CSR on the reading comprehension outcomes of their students participated in a 2nd-year, new cohort of students. Teachers taught multiple sections of ELA or reading; sections were randomly assigned to a treatment or comparison condition, and any extra classes were assigned to the treatment condition. There were 26 CSR and 22 comparison classes. Teachers were asked to implement CSR in their treatment classes only for approximately two 50-min sessions per week for 18 weeks. Examining the role of fidelity revealed that CSR was more prevalent in treatment classes than the comparison classes and that ELA teachers had significantly less treatment spillover than the Reading teachers. Findings indicate that CSR was associated with a greater effect when implemented in ELA classrooms compared to Reading classrooms.

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Sharon Vaughn

University of Texas at Austin

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Greg Roberts

University of Texas at Austin

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Alison G. Boardman

University of Colorado Boulder

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Anna-Mária Fall

University of Texas at Austin

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Janette K. Klingner

University of Colorado Boulder

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Michael Solis

University of Texas at Austin

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Shawn C. Kent

Florida State University

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