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E-raamat: Mind, Brain, and Education in Reading Disorders

Edited by (Harvard University, Massachusetts), Edited by (University of Southern California), Edited by (The Children's Hospital, Boston)
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A pioneering study of a new interdisciplinary research area which connects neuroscience with education.

One of the key topics for establishing meaningful links between brain sciences and education is the development of reading. How does biology constrain learning to read? How does experience shape the development of reading skills? How does research on biology and behaviour connect to the ways that schools, teachers and parents help children learn to read, particularly in the face of disabilities that interfere with learning? This book addresses these questions and illuminates why reading disorders have been hard to identify, how recent research has established a firm base of knowledge about the cognitive neuroscience of reading problems and the learning tools for overcoming them, and, finally, what the future holds for relating mind, brain, and education to understanding reading difficulties. Connecting knowledge from neuroscience, genetics, cognitive science, child development, neuropsychology and education, this book will be of interest to both academic researchers and graduate students.

Muu info

Explains why reading disorders have been hard to identify and how mind, brain and education can help to understand them.
List of figures
xii
List of tables
xiv
List of contributors
xv
Acknowledgements xvii
Part I What is Reading, and What are Reading Disorders? Looking to Neuroscience, Evolution, and Genetics
Toward a grounded synthesis of mind, brain, and education for reading disorders: an introduction to the field and this book
3(13)
Kurt W. Fischer
Mary Helen Immordino-Yang
Deborah Waber
An evolutionary perspective on reading and reading disorders
16(14)
Mary Helen Immordino-Yang
Terrence W. Deacon
Essay: Brain volume and the acquisition of adaptive capacities
30(7)
Verne S. Caviness
The genetics of dyslexia: what is the phenotype?
37(24)
Albert M. Galaburda
Gordon F. Sherman
Part II Reading and the Growing Brain: Methodology and History
A brief history of time, phonology, and other explanations of developmental dyslexia
61(19)
Maryanne Wolf
Jane Ashby
Approaches to behavioral and neurological research on learning disabilities: in search of a deeper synthesis
80(21)
Robbie Case
Growth cycles of mind and brain: analyzing developmental pathways of learning disorders
101(32)
Kurt W. Fischer
L. Todd Rose
Samuel P. Rose
Essay: Cycles and gradients in development of the cortex
124(9)
Robert W. Thatcher
Brain bases of reading disabilities
133(15)
Francine Benes
Juliana Pare-Blagoev
The neural correlates of reading disorder: functional magnetic resonance imaging
148(20)
Juliana Pare-Blagoev
Patterns of cortical connection in children with learning problems
168(13)
Frank H. Duffy
Essay: The role of experience in brain development: adverse effects of childhood maltreatment
176(5)
Martin H. Teicher
Part III Watching Children Read
Finding common ground to promote dialogue and collaboration: using case material to jointly observe children's behavior
181(15)
Jane Holmes Bernstein
Analyzing the reading abilities of four boys: educational implications
196(21)
Susan Brady
First impressions: What four readers can teach us
217(10)
Benita A. Blachman
Analysis of reading disorders from a neuropsychological perspective
227(16)
H. Gerry Taylor
An educational/psychological perspective on the behaviors of three children with reading disabilities
243(12)
Joseph K. Torgesen
Part IV Reading Skills in the Long Term
The importance of comprehension in reading problems and instruction
255(9)
Joseph C. Campione
Essay: Bring reading research to the trenches
261(3)
Sandra Priest Rose
What successful adults with dyslexia teach educators about children
264(18)
Rosalie Fink
Is a synthesis possible? Making doubly sure in research and application
282(11)
David Rose
Appendix: Transcript and behavioral data from Profiles in Reading Skills (Four Boys) 293(34)
Index 327


Kurt W. Fischer is Charles Warland Bigelow Professor of Education and Human Development and Director of the Mind, Brian and Education Program in the Graduate School of Education at Harvard University. He is founding president of the International Mind, Brain and Education Society and founding editor of the new journal Mind, Brain and Education. Jane Holmes Bernstein is a developmental neuropsychologist who divides her time between teaching, writing and research responsibilities at the Children's Hospital Boston and the establishment of a National Child Development Program in Trinidad and Tobago. Mary Helen Immordino-Yang studies the neuroscience of emotion and its relation to cognitive, linguistic and social development at the Brain and Creativity Institute, University of Southern California. She recently received her doctorate from the Graduate School of Education at Harvard University.