This evidence-based resource includes clinical examples to support chapter information, with a focus on the science of reading and writing, typical and exceptional reading and writing development, and assessments and interventions for individuals with reading and writing differences. The author uses a student-friendly writing style that promotes learning at various levels of thinking: remembering, understanding, applying, analyzing, evaluating, and creating.
Key Features:
* An overview of current and influential theoretical models, the research supporting these models, and the evidence challenging each model
* Detailed table of current published and standardized reading assessments for children, adolescents, and adults
* Chapters featuring interviews with family members or teachers of individuals who have had experience with reading differences
* Highlights of the accessibility and cultural implications of the presented information
* Supplementary activities for instructors to conduct in class to support learning
Language, Literacy, and Learning: Theory and Application is also a useful resource for special education teachers who work with students experiencing reading differences.
Meredith Saletta Fitzgibbons, PhD, CCC-SLP (preferred pronouns: she/her/hers) earned her Bachelor of Arts in Special Education and Judaic Studies from Hebrew Theological College (Chicago, IL), her Master of Science in Communication Disorders and Sciences from Rush University (Chicago, IL), and her Doctor of Philosophy in Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences from Purdue University (West Lafayette, IN). Her research explores speech kinematics, the influence of orthography on speech production, and literacy in individuals with intellectual or developmental disabilities. Currently, Dr. Saletta Fitzgibbons is an assistant professor in the Speech-Language Pathology Program at Midwestern University (Downers Grove, IL).