When I do my talks, I always tell parents and teachers, I felt that it help the child, who is reading by shapes, better decode the letters with more spaces around words. Now a study backs that up, happy to hear I was not wrong all this years.. hope you find this helpful.
WASHINGTON: European
researchers have said offering reading materials with wider spacing
between the letters can help dyslexic children read faster and better.
In
a sample of dyslexic children age eight to 14, extra-wide letter
spacing doubled accuracy and increased reading speed by more than 20
percent, according to the study in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences.
Scientists believe the approach worked
because people with dyslexia are more affected than normal readers by a
phenomenon known as "crowding," which makes a letter harder to identify
when it is close to other letters.
"Our findings offer a practical way to ameliorate dyslexics' reading achievement without any training," said the study led by Marco Zorzi of the Department of General Psychology at Italy's University of Padova.
Researchers
studied 54 Italian and 40 French dyslexic children, giving them a text
made up of 24 short sentences to read in either standard or expanded
letter spacing.
In the standard text, the words were printed in
Times-Roman font with a 14-point print size (1 point = 0.353 mm in
typesetting standards).
In the expanded text, the space between
letters was increased by 2.5 points, so the "space between i and l in the
Italian word il (the) was 2.7 points in normal text vs. 5.2 points in
spaced text," said the study.
The space between lines of text was also increased to show a proportional amount of white space on the page.
The children were given either French or Italian texts according to their native language, and the regular and extra-space sessions were scheduled two weeks apart to minimize the effect that memorization might have on reading speed.
Not only did dyslexic children read faster, but
the greatest benefits were observed in children who had the most problems
identifying letters.
Children without reading challenges showed
no increase in reading speed when given materials in which letters were
more widely spaced, suggesting that the benefit was unique to children
with dyslexia.
"Practitioners only know too well that getting
dyslexic children to read more is a key component in achieving
long-lasting improvements in reading skills," said the study.
"Extra
large letter spacing, which could even be optimized adaptively on an
individual basis, can certainly contribute to achieving this goal."
Dyslexia
is a developmental disorder that is linked to a problem in the part of
the brain that interprets language, and can run in families. Extra
tutoring and an intense focus on reading are the most frequently
advocated treatments.
The disorder, which has no cure, is estimated to affect about 15 percent of Americans.
Co-authors on the study came from Aix-Marseille University and France's Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique.
The
research was funded by grants from the Institute for Maternal and Child
Health in Italy, the European Research Council Grant, and the University
of Padova.
- AFP/al
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