
The Reading Comprehension Kit
for Hyperlexia and Autism (Level 2)
MPN | 37630 |
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Brand | Mind Resources |
Packaging | 1 EA |
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This kit uses NINE evidence-based strategies to improve reading comprehension in children with hyperlexia and ASD: priming, accessing prior knowledge, story analysis and summary, planned redundancy, cloze sentences, phrase and sentence strips, pronoun referent practice, vocabulary training, and visualizing. Each of the six units in this kit contains two stories—one written at the first- to second-grade level and one written at the second- through fourth-grade level.
- Realistic Fiction—Stories depict situations and characters that may be somewhat familiar to the reader.
- Fantasy—Stories gently introduce talking animals, and the reader is required to accept situations that are not real.
- Narrative Nonfiction— Factual material is embedded within a fictional narrative. The characters depict how children may record observations and organize factual information.
- Priming—The student discusses how the title gives an indication of the main idea of the story, matches phrase strips to questions, and talks about the story pictures.
- Vocabulary—The student discusses background information and what the he knows about each vocabulary word and picture.
- Definitions—The student matches words to definitions on phrase strips and expands on each definition.
- Access prior knowledge—The student associates the story topic and events with prior experiences.
- Read the story—The student reads the story. Instructor prompts are included to help the student comprehend the story (e.g., point out ideas that are inferred, summarize the main idea, talk about the relevance of particular details, and reinforce story vocabulary and content).
- Story summary—The student retells the story using sentence strips and then retells the story to someone else.
- Basic story analysis—The student talks about the main idea, setting, characters, and plot of the story and matches phrase strips to questions.
- Problem/Solution—The student asssociates his own experience to problems and solutions in the story and in real life and matches sentence strips to questions.
- Higher-level story analysis—The student answers questions that may be ambiguous and learns to infer while matching phrase strips to questions.
- Visualizing—The student draws pictures about the story.
- Pronoun referents—The student connects pronouns to the person(s) or thing(s) they refer to in sentences from the story.
- Ages 7 - 12
- Grades 2 - 7