What evidence is there to support ReadingDoctor®?
ReadingDoctor® software is scientifically based, meaning that it has been designed based on findings from scientific research into reading acquisition and reading difficulties. There are also a growing number of independent studies which provide evidence for the effectiveness of our software. You can read a summary of these studies below. If you are a researcher interested in conducting a study on the efficacy of our software, please contact us.
Research supporting the effectiveness of ReadingDoctor®
Karyn L. Carson (2019). Can an app a day keep illiteracy away? Piloting the efficacy of Reading Doctor apps for preschoolers with developmental language disorder. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology. https://doi.org/10.1080/17549507.2019.1667438
“Children exposed to the Reading Doctor apps made significant improvements, with substantial effect sizes, in phoneme blending, phoneme segmentation and letter-sound knowledge”
Winn, T., Miller, J., & van Steenbrugge, W. (2020). The Efficacy of a Computer Program for Increasing Phonemic Awareness and Decoding Skills in a Primary School Setting for Children with Reading Difficulties. Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 45(12). http://dx.doi.org/10.14221/ajte.202v45n12.1
“Findings show the efficacy of (supplementary) computer-assisted instruction with Reading Doctor in children with reading difficulties, improving phonological and, more specifically, phonemic awareness as well as basic word reading skills in terms of reading (decoding) nonwords and the efficiency of sight word reading.”
Winn, T.R., Carson, K.L., Collings, G.J. and Van Steenbrugge, W.J. (2019). Using Reading Doctor to accelerate class-level reading development for children with and without low language ability. In Engaging, Collaborating, Empowering. Joint SPA and NZSTA Conference. Brisbane, Australia. Jun 2019.
“Reading Doctor software may provide a useful adjunct to classroom reading instruction by accelerating learning of phoneme-grapheme correspondences.”
Westerveld, M.F., Armstrong, R. and Peach, J. (2019). Examining the effectiveness of an intensive six week school based phonological and orthographic processing intervention for Year 5 students with dyslexia. In Engaging, Collaborating, Empowering. Joint SPA and NZSTA Conference. Brisbane, Australia. Jun 2019.
“The six-week intervention programme was effective in boosting students’ performance in important print-related skills that underlie successful word recognition, i.e. orthographic knowledge and decoding of regular and nonsense words.”
ReadingDoctor® has been recommended by leading researchers and institutions in Australia.
"An example of a good app is Reading Doctor software because it incorporates a carefully designed sequence of content and skills, as well as the proven effective teaching strategies of modelling, guided practice, independent practice, and feedback." - Education needs to be evidence-informed, Dr Jennifer Buckingham, Australian Financial Review, April 16, 2021.
To read the whole article, please visit this link: Education needs to be evidence-informed by Dr Jennifer Buckingham
ReadingDoctor® has been included in Five from Five, Auspeld and Learning Difficulties Australia's 'Primary Reading Pledge'. The Primary Reading Pledge is an evidence-based framework for schools to dramatically reduce the number of children who finish primary school unable to read proficiently. Reading Doctor is recommended as a program that has been ‘shown to be effective in experimental trials published in peer-reviewed journals’.
You can read more about it here: Primary Reading Pledge
ReadingDoctor® has been included in AUSPELD's latest "Understanding Learning Difficulties" guide under the section, "Examples of High Quality, Evidence-based Phonics Programs and Resources".
You can download the entire guide here: https://uldforparents.com/
ReadingDoctor® has been included in the South Australian Government Department of Education, Skills and Employment's recommended response to the Year 1 Phonics Screening Check, 'Phonics screening check: analysing and responding to results’. This document is a companion document to the ‘Phonics screening check: administration guide’. Reading Doctor is listed as a recomended digital resource that, “…provides computer software and tablet apps designed to support the teaching of synthetic phonics. The software and apps strengthen skills crucial for literacy learning such as phonemic awareness, letter-sound knowledge, blending, segmentation, decoding and sight word recognition”.
You can read more about the Phonics Screening check here:
Year 1 Phonics Screening Check for teachers
ReadingDoctor® is on the Association of Independent Schools of NSW list of recommended apps for developing phonics and spelling.
You can see their full list of resources here:
Association of Independent Schools of NSW - Learning from Home - Literacy