The Effect of a Dog Assisted Reading Program on the Reading Ability and Motivation of Children with Dyslexia

Author:

Goodmon Leilani B.1,Burnett Pippa R.1,Pack Renee1,Powell Rebecca2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Florida Southern College

2. School of Education, Florida Southern College

Abstract

Abstract Dog assisted reading programs have been shown to improve children’s reading skills and attitudes toward reading ( Kirnan et al., 2016 ; Levinson et al., 2017 ; Linder et al., 2018 ) and on-task behavior in children who struggle with reading ( Bassette & Taber-Doughty, 2013 ). The purpose of this study was to determine if the benefits of reading to a therapy dog would generalize to a sample of 38 children (8-11 years of age) with dyslexia. We found that the children exhibited significant improvements in reading fluency from baseline to post-treatment. Teacher opinions of students’ reading attitude - motivation also improved from baseline to post-treatment. They also reported greater reading motivation and mood when they read to the dog (i.e., experimental condition) compared to when they read to the experimenter (i.e., control condition). Inconsistent with the hypotheses, there was no significant increase in comprehension scores or trait reading motivation from baseline to post-treatment, nor was there a significance increase in reading fluency between when they read to the dog compared to when they read to the experimenter. Some of these aforementioned results (i.e., teacher reports and reading mood and motivation) were age / grade dependent. The results imply that dog assisted reading programs may benefit the number of words read per minute, reading motivation, and mood of children with dyslexia, but not reading comprehension.

Publisher

CABI Publishing

Reference27 articles.

1. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders

2. Booten A. E. (2011). Effects of animal-assisted therapy on behavior and reading in the classroom. Retrieved from http://mds.marshall.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1023& context=etd.

3. The Social Skills and Attachment to Dogs of Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder

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