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Literacy 4-6

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Literacy 4-6 > Factors > Speed of Processing

Speed of Processing

Factor Connections

Hover to see how factors connect to Speed of Processing. Then click connected factors to explore strategies related to multiple factors.

How Speed of Processing connects to...

Speed of Processing is the rate at which we perceive and process information and formulate an appropriate response. When we read and write, we are perceiving and processing an incredible array of information––letters, words, punctuation, layout––and have to choose and apply the right skills for understanding it all. Supporting students as they develop their Speed of Processing skills helps them become quick, efficient, confident, and successful readers and writers.

Main Ideas

For literacy, Speed of Processing influences:

  • The rate at which students can recognize and pronounce words;
  • The rate at which students can accurately read and write text;
  • How well students can understand reading material; and
  • How well students can plan what they want to write.

For many learners with dyslexia or ADHD, processing speed may be affected when reading and writing, resulting in slower reading times and difficulties skimming text for relevant words.

Major Learner Factor Interactions

  • Foundational Writing Skills: The ability to produce legible and accurate spelling and punctuation with sufficient writing speed. Mastering these skills supports the foundational skill of writing fluency so that the student can focus more on the content they want to convey rather than on the details of spelling and punctuation.
    • A faster Speed of Processing improves Foundational Writing Skills because it helps make the production of these skills automatic (Floyd et al., 2008).
  • Inhibition: The ability to suppress attention to irrelevant stimuli to focus on pertinent stimuli/information and to self-regulate behavior
    • Faster Speed of Processing helps enhance Inhibition because it helps students rapidly interpret whether a behavior should be inhibited (McAuley & White, 2011).
  • Phonological Processing: The knowledge of and ability to process, manipulate, and detect sounds in words
    • Faster Speed of Processing allows for faster and more efficient Phonological Processing (Bowey et al., 2004).
  • Short-term Memory: The ability to hold information for a short period of time
    • Faster Speed of Processing is related to enhanced phonological Short-term Memory. This is likely because when information is processed faster, you are less likely to forget it (Montgomery & Windsor, 2007).
  • Working Memory: The type of memory that allows a person to temporarily hold and manipulate information for use in many complex cognitive processes
    • A faster Speed of Processing enhances Working Memory capacity because it allows more information to enter Working Memory due to faster rehearsal (Kail & Salthouse, 1994; Leonard et al., 2007).
  • Hearing:
    • Students with hearing loss and language impairments exhibit slower processing speed than their hearing counterparts (Dyer et al., 2003).

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