SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
ALTA Certification Academic Language Therapy
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
certifications
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. 1904 - reported 2 cases of "congenital word blindness" - called for schools to establish procedures for screening as well as appropriate teaching of those that were identified with congenital word-blindness
James Hinshelwood
Analytic
Norm-referenced tests
The Norman Conquest
2. Use - pictures - charts - maps - graphs - etc...clear view of teacher - color to highlight important text - ask teacher to provide handouts - illustrate ideas as pictures before writing them down - use multi media
Visual Learners
Chall's Stage 5
Tactile/Kinesthetic Learners
Multisensory
3. Scientific terminology and often appear in science texts - Greek roots are often combining forms and compound to form words.
Greek layer of language
Dyslexia
Phonemic Awareness
Macron
4. 1887 - ophthalmologist - introduced the term dyslexia
Norm-Referenced Test
Language Experience called 'Whole Language'
Dr. Rudolf Berlin
Keith Stanovich
5. A term coined by Stanovich to describe a phenomenon observed in findings of cumulative advantage for children who read well and have good vocabulary and cumulative disadvantage for those who have inadequate vocabularies and read less and thus have lo
Cognition
Open Syllable
Matthew Effect
IDEA
6. Two adjacent letters repressing a single consonant sound
Accent
Standard Scores
Adolf Kusmaul
Consonant Digraph
7. Closed syllable
Standard deviation
IDEA
VC
Orthography
8. Stress or emphasis on one syllable in a word or on one or more words in a phrase or sentence. The accented part is spoken louder - longer - and/or in a higher tone. The speaker's mouth opens wider while saying an accented syllable.
NICHD
Affix
Accent
Chall's Stage 1
9. Expects child to learn reading as "naturally" as speech - Uses child's oral language as content for reading - Uses child's oral language as basis for spelling instruction - Children learn to "read" by reading and re-reading "big books" together with
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
10. Wide Range Achievement Test
WRAT
Tilde
Multi-Sensory Approach
Analytic
11. The curved line placed beneath c to indicate its "soft" or (s) pronunciation - as opposed to its hard or (k) pronunciation. Students use the coding on c before the letters e - i - or y (the softeners) - to remind themselves to pronounced the (s) soun
Bottom-up Reading Approachs
Standardized test
Cedilla
Affix
12. Effective for special needs - Uses all possible senses - tracing - saying - listening - looking - Typically called VAKT - Visual - Auditory - Kinesthetic - Tactile - Can be used with either Phonics or Whole Language
Adolf Kusmaul
Diagnostic tests
MSL
Multi-Sensory Approach
13. Phonemic Awareness - Phonics - Vocabulary Development - Reading Fluency - including oral reading skills - Reading Comprehension Strategies
Consonant
Components of Reading Instruction
Grapheme
Modification
14. Two vowels standing adjacent in the same syllable whose sounds blend smoothly together in one syllable. There are only four diphthongs in English. These are ou/out - ow/cow - oi/oil - oy - boy
Three Layers of Language
Diphthong
Phonemic/ decodable words
V-e
15. Federal Law. Nondiscrimination on the basis of handicap in programs receiving federal $$ - Civil Rights Law - to protect people with disabilities by allowing full participation in the workplace.
Rehabilitation Act of 1973/504
GORT
Anglo-Saxon layer of language
ADHD
16. An objective test that is given and scored in a uniform manner. Scores are often norm-referenced. For example SAT
Six basic types of syllables
Standardized test
Norm-referenced tests
Phonemic Awareness
17. Test of Word Reading Efficiency. Screening test. measures an individual's ability to pronounce printed words accurately and fluently. Generates percentiles - standard scores - age equivalents - and grade equivalents.Decoding - Sight words
Accuracy
Phonemic Awareness
Syllable
Towre
18. Proceeds from the whole to the part - suggests that processing of a text begins in the mind of the readers. Meaning is brought to print not derived from print.
Top-down Reading Approach
Six basic types of syllables
Vr
Phonological Awareness
19. A quick probe that is done frequently in order to make instructional changes in a timely fashion.
GORT
Standard deviation
Progress Monitoring
Components of Reading Instruction
20. A standardized test designed to efficiently measure the amount of knowledge and/or skill a person has acquired - usually as a result of classroom instruction. Such testing produces a statistical profile used as a measurement to evaluate student learn
Achievement test
[-'le
Standard score
Morpheme
21. Proceeds from the part to the whole.Reading is driven by the text. Emphasizes the written or printed text. Flesch - Gough - LaBerge and Samuels.
Matthew Effect
Standardized test
Middle English
Bottom-up Reading Approachs
22. Set of principles that dictate the sequence and function of words in a sentence in order to convey meaning - must include grammar - sentence types - and mechanics of language
Syntax
Standard Scores
Standard deviation
Middle English
23. Response to Intervention - a multi-step or tiered approach to providing services and interventions at increasing intensity to students or an entire class.
Macron
RTI
Synthetic Instruction
Phoneme
24. A score that describes student performance in terms of the statistical performance of an average student at a given grade level. Ranges from K.0 to 12.9 Are not a dependable representation of progress
Grade equivalents
Comprehension
Age equivalent
Funding
25. Are standardized and measure your progress and achievements as a student.
Orthography
Matthew Effect
MSLE
Academic Achievement Tests
26. Aspect of language concerned with meaning. Curriculum should include comprehension of written language.
Semantics
Battery
CTOPP
Syllable
27. A step taken by school personnel to determine which students are at risk for not meeting grade level standards.
Dr. W. Pringle Morgan
WIATII
Universal Screening
Anglo Saxon
28. Words that are able to be broken apart by the position of the vowels and consonants in order to pronounce.
Phonemic/ decodable words
Fluency
Texas Education Code 38.003
Greek layer of language
29. Shakespeare - Samuel Johnson - first comprehensive dictionary of English - Noah Webster - first dictionary of American English - Oxford Dictionary published in full 1928
Phonics approach
Modern English
Consonant Digraph
Mathew Effect
30. Edward III - English again becomes the official language of the state -Chaucer - Canterbury Tales - English borrows from Latin and Greek languages - Anglo-French compounds appear (gentlewomen - gentlemen - faithful - etc) - Latin layer of language -
Towre
IMSLEC
VAKT
Middle English
31. The teacher musts be adept at individualized teaching based on continual assessment of the student's needs. Content should be mastered to a level of automaticity.
Chall's Stage 3
Diagnostic Teaching
Grapheme
IEP
32. Is a specific learning disability that is neurological in origin. It is characterized by difficulties with accurate and/or fluent word recognition and by poor spelling and decoding abilities. These difficulties typically result from a deficit in the
Phoneme
Phonemic Awareness
Chall's Stage 1
Dyslexia
33. Ability to think reason and solve problems. Skills are usually measured by an individual test of intelligence/IQ test. Requires being able to generalize from past experience and use that knowledge to respond to new situations.
Standard Scores
Adolf Kusmaul
Cognition
Old English
34. A diacritical marking. A wavy line placed over any vowel before r in a combination to indicate the unaccented pronunciation eg letter. The tildes used both in coding words and in a sound picture. When the pronunciation of any unaccented vowel-r combi
Standard deviation
VC
Tilde
Middle English
35. State Board of Eduation
Grapheme
Kinesthetic
Percentile/ percentile rank
SBOE
36. 1930 - Psychologist and teacher in New York; along with Samuel T. Orton at Columbia University - developed a non-traditional approach to teaching written language skills. Trained one teacher at a time. began working with Sally Childs and trained 50 t
Anna Gillingham
Accommodation
Digraph
Derivative
37. Normalized standard scores with a range of 1 to 9. They are status score within a particulur norm group.
Systematic and Cumulative Instruction
Dr. Rudolf Berlin
Stanine Scores
NICHD
38. Visual-Auditory-Kinesthetic/Tactile
Attention
Digraph
VAKT
Syntax
39. Given normal vision - the ability to recognize and interpret information taken in with the eye.
Visual Processing
Morphology
IEP
Matthew Effect
40. 1925 - Coined the term "strephosymbolia" which means twisted symbols; Pathologist - neurologist and psychitrist in the US - studied with Dr. Alzheimer in Germany - work influenced by James Hinshelwood
Samuel T. Orton
Auditory Processing
Systematic and Cumulative Instruction
[-'le
41. The ancient Britons (Celts) conquered by Caesar in 54 c.e. - Celtic and Latin languages co-exist - Teutonic tribes (Jutes - Angles and Saxons invade) - Anglo-Saxon layer of language
Pre-English
James Hinshelwood
Analytic
Adolf Kusmaul
42. A way of describing - in standard deviation units - a raw score's distance from its distribution means.
Matthew Effect
Adolf Kusmaul
Semantics
Standard score
43. Vowel team syllable (digraph - dipthong)
Phonemic/ decodable words
VV
Texas Education Code 38.003
IDEA
44. Is one that provides for translating test scores into a statement about the behavior to be expected of a person with that score or their relationship to a specified subject matter. Most tests and quizzes written by school teachers are criterion-refer
Standard score
Affix
Criterion-Referenced Test
Middle English
45. A spoken or written unit that must have a vowel sound and that may include consonants that precede or follow that vowel. Syllables are units of sound made by one impulse of voice.
Diagnostic tests
IMSLEC
Quadrigraph
Syllable
46. To adjacent letters representing a single vowel sound
Criterion-Referenced Test
Phoneme
Modern English
Vowel Digraph
47. Study of sounds and how the work within their environment
VAKT
Consonant Digraph
Phonology
Texas Education Code 38.003
48. A syllable ending with a long vowel sound. (labor - freedom)
Open Syllable
Vr
CTOPP
Diagnostic Teaching
49. Construction and Reconstruction - Construct understanding based on analysis and synthesis.
Warning
: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in
/var/www/html/basicversity.com/show_quiz.php
on line
183
50. Ability to understand and express spoken language
Oral Language
Analytic
Accent
Dr. Rudolf Berlin