Photo of classroom using the ROAR
A new online tool allows school districts to assess their entire student population for struggling readers in the time it currently takes to run a standard assessment on a single student. (Photo: Kurt Hickman)

New online tool developed by 海角乱伦社区 researchers helps schools spot struggling readers in a fraction of the usual time

海角乱伦社区 researchers are working with local schools to transform a pandemic workaround into a tool for screening students with reading difficulties.
June 9, 2022
By Carrie Spector

Identifying struggling young readers can be a time-consuming and costly task for schools, requiring a teacher or reading specialist to sit with students one-on-one to gauge their proficiency as the child reads aloud.

A new online tool developed at a 海角乱伦社区 lab lifts that burden without compromising any of the reliability of one-to-one assessments while advancing research into why some kids have trouble with reading in the first place.

The  (ROAR), developed at the  at 海角乱伦社区, introduces a way for school districts to assess their entire student population for struggling readers in the time it currently takes to run a standard assessment on a single student.

In addition to giving teachers useful insight into the challenges a particular student faces, the collective data generated by the assessment is helping to further the lab鈥檚 research into factors linked to learning differences in young readers.

鈥淲ith the ROAR, schools and clinics can assess and monitor kids鈥 progress at a scale that just wasn鈥檛 possible before,鈥 said Jason Yeatman, an assistant professor at 海角乱伦社区 Graduate School of Education (GSE) and the School of Medicine, who directs the Brain Development & Education Lab. 鈥淎nd because the tool is tied to research that鈥檚 ongoing, it gives us data that can answer a lot of questions about the mechanisms of reading development 鈥 data that can help us understand why some kids struggle and others don鈥檛.鈥

"The hope is that, as we begin to understand the barriers for some kids, we can develop targeted interventions."

Jason Yeatman
Assistant Professor, 海角乱伦社区 Graduate School of Education and the School of Medicine

A pandemic workaround takes off

The ROAR actually originated as a COVID-19 research workaround for the lab, where Yeatman and his team study the mechanisms in the brain that underlie learning.

One focus of the lab is to develop interventions for young children with dyslexia, research that relies on brain imaging studies to observe the effects an intervention has on the brain. That work includes developing targeted measures to evaluate a child鈥檚 growth in specific reading skills.

鈥淎ll of this requires working in close, one-on-one or small group settings with children,鈥 said Yeatman. 鈥淲hen the pandemic hit, with all of its uncertainty, we realized that we needed to come up with some new innovations in order to continue pushing our research forward.鈥

The researchers thought an online assessment might function reasonably well in place of the standardized in-person version they had been using, and they developed a prototype of the ROAR. Subsequent  showed a remarkably high-reliability rate: Scores generated by the ROAR correlated strongly with those from standardized in-person screenings, including the Woodcock-Johnson assessment of basic reading skills, widely considered the gold standard.

鈥淭he correlation was almost perfect, meaning these measures are tapping into a very similar construct,鈥 said Yeatman. 鈥淗onestly, we didn鈥檛 expect it to work as well as it did.鈥

Meanwhile, Yeatman and his team had been working with local school officials around new California guidelines issued to help teachers identify and support students with dyslexia. That relationship 鈥 developed through the , a partnership launched in 2018 to connect GSE researchers with San Mateo County school districts to explore challenges facing the districts 鈥 laid the groundwork for helping to pilot and refine the ROAR.

鈥淲e鈥檇 had a lot of conversations [with Yeatman] about how we could get more data, where we could find a good universal screener, how to go about implementing the guidelines 鈥 we learned a lot from him and his team,鈥 said Marta Batlle, student services director at the Woodside School District, one of the districts in the collaborative. 鈥淲hen they asked if we wanted to partner to administer the ROAR, we were really interested in having more data, and we wanted to be part of the research process.鈥

Making a game of it

The ROAR, which runs on any web browser, launched with an assessment that measures students鈥 ability to quickly recognize words, a foundational skill for reading fluency and comprehension. It鈥檚 designed to feel like a computer game, with cartoon-like characters walking students through the activity and encouraging them along the way. A mix of actual and made-up words flash on the screen; the student鈥檚 task is to determine whether each word is real or not.

鈥淭he kids love it,鈥 Batlle said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e engaged, and they want to do it.鈥

Students as young as first-graders can do the assessment on their own, in the classroom or at home.

The lab collaborated closely with school leaders to develop interactive score reports for the educators, providing statistics and visualizations from the district level down to individual classrooms and students.

鈥淭he reports provide immediate, actionable data back to reading specialists and teachers, right after students have taken the ROAR,鈥 said Amy Burkhardt, director of research and partnerships at the Brain Development & Education Lab. (The scores are stripped of any identifying student data for 海角乱伦社区鈥檚 use.)

鈥淲ith the ROAR, we got a measure for every student in the classroom in about the same amount of time it takes us to administer our usual screener with one child,鈥 said Ching-Pei Hu, assistant superintendent at the Belmont-Redwood Shores School District, another district in the 海角乱伦社区-Sequoia K-12 Research Collaborative that worked with 海角乱伦社区 to pilot the ROAR. 鈥淚t鈥檚 fast, it鈥檚 efficient, and it was reliable in giving us a baseline of who we need to dig into some more.鈥

Looking ahead

As they work with schools and clinics to refine the ROAR鈥檚 tool for assessing single-word recognition, Yeatman and his team are developing others for more complex reading skills, including phonological awareness (the ability to recognize and manipulate sounds) and the ability to silently read and understand full sentences quickly and accurately.

Through pilot funding from 海角乱伦社区鈥檚 , the team recently  their research collaborations to include KIPP Schools of Northern California. The lab is also collaborating with the  clinic in the 海角乱伦社区 School of Medicine to explore the use of these assessments as a screener for children with learning differences who enter 海角乱伦社区 Hospitals and Clinics.

Beyond providing a practical tool for clinicians and educators and a better understanding of learning differences, the researchers hope the data generated by the ROAR will ultimately help in developing tailored approaches to help struggling readers.

鈥淵ou can see kids from the same background 鈥 the same families, even 鈥 entering kindergarten, where they learn how letters can be combined to make words and represent human language,鈥 said Yeatman. 鈥淪ome kids dive right into that and they鈥檙e suddenly reading, but others struggle deeply for many years to learn this mapping, to make it automatic, to be able to use written language as a fluid form of communication. We鈥檙e trying to understand the difference 鈥 and the hope is that as we begin to understand the barriers for some kids, we can develop targeted interventions.鈥

The Rapid Online Assessment of Reading (ROAR) is among the projects of the initiative on Learning Differences and the Future of Special Education at 海角乱伦社区 Graduate School of Education. The 海角乱伦社区 , which creates and delivers new learning solutions, helped facilitate the use of the ROAR with schools and other partners.

Early funding for the tool was provided through a  award from the Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute at 海角乱伦社区.


Faculty mentioned in this article: Jason Yeatman