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Test your basic knowledge |
ALTA Certification Academic Language Therapy
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Study First
Subject
:
certifications
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
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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. 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
Multi-Sensory Approach
Mastery level
Morpheme
Sight Words
2. A word made from a base word by the addition of one or more affixes
Synthetic Instruction
V >
Progress Monitoring
Derivative
3. 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
Tactile/Kinesthetic Learners
NICHD
Samuel T. Orton
4. An ability test is designed to measure either your general intelligence or your mental aptitude in a particular area. For example
RTI
Ability
GORT
Middle English
5. The percentage is defined to include scores in a specified distribution that fall below the point at which a given score lies.
Accuracy
Percentile
Grapheme
Suffix
6. Words used in more formal settings - Often found in literature - science - social studies in upper elem. texts. Longer than words of Anglo-Saxon Origin.
Analytic
Latin layer of language
Composite Score
Macron
7. Reading can be learned as naturally as speaking - reading is focused on constructing meaning from texts using children's books rather than basal or controlled readers - reading is best learned in the context of the group - phonics is taught indirectl
Social language
Semantics
Whole Language
Visual Learners
8. 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
MSLE
RTI
Consonant
Samuel T. Orton
9. A student with mastery can utilize the information successfully - but may struggle or need to call upon learning strategies to do so.
Derived Score
Standard deviation
Mastery level
Matthew Effect
10. Proceeds from the part to the whole.Reading is driven by the text. Emphasizes the written or printed text. Flesch - Gough - LaBerge and Samuels.
Cognition
Raw score
Bottom-up Reading Approachs
[-'le
11. Phonemic Awareness - Phonics - Vocabulary Development - Reading Fluency - including oral reading skills - Reading Comprehension Strategies
Great Vowel Shift
Components of Reading Instruction
Funding
Combination
12. The number of words a student can read correctly in a given period of time.
Accent
Old English
Accuracy
Percentile/ percentile rank
13. Normalized standard scores with a range of 1 to 9. They are status score within a particulur norm group.
Percentile
Pre-English
Stanine Scores
Macron
14. 1877 - first to use the term "word-blindness"
Syllable
Adolf Kusmaul
Synthetic Instruction
Age equivalent
15. The knowledge of the various sounds in the English language and their correspondence to the letter or letters that represent those sounds.
Fluency
Chall's Stage 0
Vowel
Sound Symbol Association
16. Three adjacent letters which represent one speech sound (tch)
Linguistic Method
Accent
Chall's Stage 4
Trigraph
17. Alphabetic principle" and its relationship to phonemic awareness and phonological awareness in reading
Social language
Phoneme
Alvin and Isabel Liberman
Matthew Effect
18. Take frequent study breaks - move around to learn new things - work at a standing position - chew gum while standing - listen to music while studying - skim material first then read in detail
Phonics approach
Tactile/Kinesthetic Learners
Joe Torgesen
Standard deviation
19. A word to which affixes are added. A base word can stand alone.
Cognition
Fluency
Derived Score
Base Word
20. Most soundly supported by research for effective instruction in beginning reading - Must be explicitly taught - Must be systematically organized and sequenced - Must include learning how to blend sounds together
Latin layer of language
IDEA
James Hinshelwood
Phonics approach
21. A test in which a student's performance is compared to that of a norm group. Often used to measure and compare students - schools - districts and states.
Mastery level
IEP
Diagnostic Teaching
Norm-referenced tests
22. Final stable syllable
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23. A pattern of letters (found in a single syllable) which occurs frequently together. The pronunciation of at least one of the component parts is unexpected or the letters stand in an unexpected sequence ( ar - er - ir - or - us - qu - wh)
Combination
Phoneme
NICHD
Towre
24. Students proceed trough predictable stages of learning to reading.
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25. Provide different ways for kids to take in information or communicate their knowledge back to you. The changes do not alter or lower the standards or expectations of a subject or a test.
Accommodation
Six basic types of syllables
Letter naming Chart
Diagnostic tests
26. A single functioning or signaling unit of our word patterns. The separate sound units of spoken words.
Vowel Digraph
Syllable
Phoneme
Standardized test
27. State Board of Education Rule - District Board of Trustees must make sure dyslexia procedures are given to the district. - District must use SBOE approved strategies for screening and treating dyslexia
James Hinshelwood
Auditory Learners
Texas Administrative Code 74.28
Mathew Effect
28. Involve at least two people. It includes the ability to maintain eye contact - understand body language of others - take turns in a conversation - stick to the subject - and use oral language appropriate for the situation.
Consonant
Social language
Mastery level
Phonology
29. 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
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30. A morpheme attached to the end of a word that creates a word with a different form or use. Suffixes include inflected forms indicating tense - number - person and comparatives.
James Hinshelwood
Suffix
Social and emotional problems related to dyslexia
Visual Learners
31. 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
Criterion referenced tests
Latin layer of language
Keith Stanovich
32. 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
Phonology
Direct Instruction
ESL
33. English as a second language
Chall's Stage 1
Vr
Stanine Scores
ESL
34. 1887 - ophthalmologist - introduced the term dyslexia
Combination
Chall's Stage 3
Attention
Dr. Rudolf Berlin
35. Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Cognition
Auditory Learners
ADHD
Orthography
36. A score that combines several scores according to a specified formula.
Composite Score
Derived Score
Attention
Diagnostic tests
37. 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.
Visual Learners
Derivative
Top-down Reading Approach
Chall's Stage 0
38. A syllable ending with one or more consonants. The vowel is usually short.
Percentile/ percentile rank
Norm-Referenced Test
Closed Syllable
VAKT
39. Closed syllable - open syllable - vowel- consonant-e - r controlled syllable - vowel team - final stable syllable
Six basic types of syllables
Expressive language
CTOPP
Modification
40. A type of derived score such that the distribution of these scores for a specified population has convenient known values for the mean and standard deviation.
GORT
V-e
Anna Gillingham
Standard Scores
41. 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
Trigraph
4 Principles of ALTA Code of Ethics
Modern English
42. Was a pivotal event in English history. It largely removed the native ruling class - replacing it with a foreign - French-speaking monarchy - aristocracy - and clerical hierarchy. This - in turn - brought about a transformation of the English languag
Curriculum referenced tests
Progress Monitoring
Joe Torgesen
The Norman Conquest
43. 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
Chall's Stage 2
Diphthong
Dyslexia
Towre
44. Any learning activity that includes 2 or more sensory modalities simultaneously to take in or express information.
Multisensory
Phonics
Texas Education Code 28.06
Rate
45. Reading for Learning "the New" - Expand vocabularies - build background and world knowledge - develop strategic habits
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46. 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
Derived Score
Derivative
Achievement test
Stanine Scores
47. Whole language. Founder of Whole language concept
Accommodation
Frank Smith
Chall's Stage 0
Academic Achievement Tests
48. Is a type of test - assessment - or evaluation which yields an estimate of the position of the tested individual in a predefined population - with respect to the trait being measured. This estimate is derived from the analysis of test scores and poss
Mathew Effect
Phonemic/ decodable words
Norm-Referenced Test
Battery
49. 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
Cedilla
Percentile/ percentile rank
Percentile
VC
50. Screening test. Elementary age only. Asks test taker to name the letters of the alphabet
Letter naming Chart
Prefix
Sight Words
Tilde