Reading Remediation and Outcomes in Detention (SERIOUS)

February 25, 2022 updated by: Elena, Baylor College of Medicine

Severe LD in Juvenile Delinquents: Presentation, Course, and Remediation

The current literature on academic skill difficulties, whether considered as part of the continuum of ability or as a specific learning disability (LD), indicates that these problems often coexist with conduct problems and juvenile delinquency, and are risk factors for initial law-breaking behavior and for its persistence. However, less is understood about how this relationship develops. It is these broad questions that this project seeks to address. First, what is the causal pathway? Does LD cause delinquency, delinquency cause LD, or are both caused by something else? And can big data analytics applied to statewide datasets of information about juvenile justice (JJ) involvement help to answer this question? Second, as it is known that learning to read and do math (and thus becoming more employable) increases the likelihood of desistance (i.e., not committing any more illegal acts), what are the necessary parts of an intervention designed to teach these skills? And what role might technology play in such an intervention? To answer these questions, we will implement a study that includes two components, (a) a big data component and (b) an intervention component. For (a), we will work with a large historical dataset from the Harris County Juvenile Probation Department. For (b), we will work, in total, with 192 (48 per year) delinquent youth with severe LD in residential placement. These individuals, in a nonconcurrent multiple baseline design, will be offered an educational therapy designed to address severe reading problems in juvenile detainees using a novel mixed media intervention in which the person-to-person intensive 1:1 component is completed while youth are in residential settings (24 sessions, delivered in 90 minute settings 3 times a week) and a "gamified" educational smartphone learning tool follow-up completed upon release (with appropriate network fidelity monitoring and participant reinforcement). The person-to-person component is developed specifically for juvenile offenders with severe LD, combining two well-established and highly-regarded intervention programs designed to systematically build students' repertoire of grapheme-phoneme correspondence rules as well as develop comprehensive reading skills, from beginning reading to proficiency.

Study Overview

Detailed Description

Learning disabilities (LD) are among the most common types of disabilities in juvenile offenders that have been linked to delinquency. Nationwide, children and youth with special education needs are overrepresented in the US justice systems. Reports estimate delinquent juveniles with a disability to comprise about 30% to 60% of the entire delinquent population. A national survey in the US states an average prevalence rate of 33.4% of incarcerated juveniles with disabilities in correctional facilities. Moreover, concerns have long been raised on the recidivism rates of youth with disabilities and special education backgrounds. In general, regarding educational performance, academic deficits such as a lack of basic skills in reading, writing, and mathematics have been associated with recidivism. However, these studies largely neglect the dynamic nature of delinquent and criminal behavior that has been documented within the field of developmental criminology with a focus on the onset, continuity, and extinction of deviant behavior. In light of this research, the identification and remediation of LD as a risk factor for repeat offending has been a persistent challenge given the accumulation of and overlap with other risk factors such as poverty, familial patterns of criminality, influence of delinquent peers, and the differential impact of risk factors across an individual's developmental trajectory. Altogether, there is a challenge around the implementation of sophisticated methodology to model the complex longitudinal and reciprocal links between juvenile delinquency and educational problems such as LD, and how they relate to other risk factors over time. This challenge is intensified by the required large samples to detect robust and interpretable patterns and predictive relationships for groups of youth with severe LDs that, by definition, are small in size and censored with regard to various educational outcomes (e.g., academic performance). This research is conceived to contribute to the field's understanding of the connection between LD and delinquent behavior. We hope to generate unique findings capitalizing on the availability of the relevant big data, the clinical strengths of its members and their capacity to develop and administer educational therapy to juvenile offenders, and its embedment within communities empowering the creation and processing of multi-level longitudinal datasets, merging sociological (i.e., criminological), behavioral, neurophysiological, and genetic/genomic data.

Big Data:

The Big Data component seeks to address three objectives: (1) to conduct big data analytics and data mining to quantify/qualify the complexities of severe LD among juvenile justice (JJ)-involved youth using statistical methods applied to big datasets that capture multiple indicators (i.e., offending and educational outcomes) cross-sectionally (for one-time offenders) and longitudinally (for repeat offenders); (2) to utilize big data analytics to identify a group of youth with severe LD who will serve as a comparison group for individuals participating in a reading intervention; and (3) to evaluate the findings from the first two objectives based on the statistical assumptions underlying the models applicable to the big data at hand.

Hypotheses. Extending previous research, Big Data seeks to identify factors that relate LD to recidivism, frequency of re-offending and re-arrest, and the time to post-involvement recidivism. We hypothesize that (a) overall recidivism rates (i.e., regardless of the specific type of offense) will be higher among JJ-involved youth with severe LD (operationalization based on standardized achievement tests and special education status) than in youth without LD; (b) youth with severe LD will show more incidents of school-related problems after their first involvement (e.g., attendance problems, disciplinary incidents such as in-school and out-of-school suspensions and expulsions) than youth without LD; (c) youth with severe LD who had school-related problems prior to their first JJ involvement will be at higher risk of recidivism than youth without LD; (d) lower levels of reading achievement will be associated with shorter periods of time to repeated offending; and (e) participation in the intervention will significantly decrease recidivism risk compared to other youth with severe LD who did not participate in the intervention.

Intervention:

The intervention component seeks to address three objectives: (1) to improve the reading skills of an understudied, high-risk population (JJ-involved youth) using an educational therapy that has been specifically designed for JJ-involved youth, provided in a 1:1 setting, and expanded with technology, including material relevant to daily living skills and appropriate reinforcement that will extend the program into the post-release period; (2) to reinforce skills and maintain reading gains made during the educational therapy, and increase the automaticity of skill use by using a high-interest "gamified" learning tool that youth will play on a SmartPhone given to them when they leave detention; and (3) to investigate the individual response to therapy with respect to other variables (e.g., attention, executive functioning, impulse control, learning ability, other academic achievement) collected at baseline.

Hypotheses. The key hypotheses of the intervention component seek to identify the factors associated with response to therapy for severe LD relative to pre-therapy functioning. We hypothesize that (a) overall improvement in reading will be related to pre-therapy academic skills, attention, and executive functioning; (b) inclusion of a metacognitive component in the therapy will provide carry-over effects, improving other academic skills; and (c) the gamification of the learning tool will result in robust technology usage, with a dose-response relationship between time spent on task and improvement in skills trained (and measured) via game play.

Study Type

Interventional

Enrollment (Anticipated)

192

Phase

  • Not Applicable

Contacts and Locations

This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.

Study Contact

Study Contact Backup

Study Locations

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study

14 years to 16 years (CHILD)

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Genders Eligible for Study

Male

Description

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Between ages 14 and 16
  • Conversational English ability (sufficient to benefit from the intervention program) based on the CASL-2 core score
  • Reading below the 3rd grade level on the KTEA-3 pseudoword decoding subtest and the TOWRE-2 phonemic decoding efficiency subtest
  • IQ at or above 70 on the KABC-II

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Hearing or vision problem that would preclude the use of visual and auditory materials
  • Developmental delay, autism spectrum disorder, or intellectual disability
  • Known genetic syndrome
  • Neurological disorder (e.g., epilepsy)
  • Current psychosis or suicidal ideation
  • Recent (within 6 months) traumatic brain injury

Study Plan

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.

How is the study designed?

Design Details

  • Primary Purpose: TREATMENT
  • Allocation: NA
  • Interventional Model: SINGLE_GROUP
  • Masking: NONE

Arms and Interventions

Participant Group / Arm
Intervention / Treatment
EXPERIMENTAL: SERIOUS Intervention
All youth will be juveniles in a residential facility for post-adjudicated youth. They will be recruited into the study as they are being placed in the facility post-adjudication, to ensure that they meet criteria and will be in the facility long enough to complete the program. All qualified youth will be invited to participate in the SERIOUS intervention; once a group of youth are recruited to complete the multiple baseline design and interventionists are free (from running interventions with other participants) to work with the youth, an intervention cycle will begin.
Strategies for Enhancing Reading in Older Underperf. Students (SERIOUS) combines two scientific, research based intervention programs, each meeting specific need of youth in detention: (1) Stevenson Reading Program, manualized and uniquely suited to students with phonological awareness, attention, and memory difficulties that may impact reading; and (2) Dr. Sharon Vaughn's well-documented, validated program, explicitly designed for older, severely reading-impaired students. SERIOUS also includes: (3) metacognitive strategies for self-regulated learning, and (4) A gamified extension of the intervention on a SmartPhone, designed to reinforce word-level skills (e.g., decoding, automaticity, and vocabulary), and including features efficacious for learning.

What is the study measuring?

Primary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Change in Reading Skills from pre-intervention (baseline) to the week after intervention
Time Frame: Assessment of change will take place at pre-intervention (baseline), the week before intervention, after four weeks of intervention, and the week after intervention.

Reading skills will be measured as a composite of two subtests from the Kaufman Test of Educational Achievement, Third Edition (KTEA-3):

  1. Letter & Word Recognition
  2. Reading Comprehension

This standard score will be obtained based on the sum of subtest standard scores according to published norms.

Assessment of change will take place at pre-intervention (baseline), the week before intervention, after four weeks of intervention, and the week after intervention.
Change in Decoding Skills from pre-intervention (baseline) to the week after intervention
Time Frame: Assessment of change will take place at pre-intervention (baseline), the week before intervention, after four weeks of intervention, and the week after intervention.

Decoding skills will be measured as a composite of two subtests from the Kaufman Test of Educational Achievement, Third Edition (KTEA-3):

  1. Letter & Word Recognition
  2. Nonsense Word Decoding

This standard score will be obtained based on the sum of subtest standard scores according to published norms.

Assessment of change will take place at pre-intervention (baseline), the week before intervention, after four weeks of intervention, and the week after intervention.
Change in Reading Understanding from pre-intervention (baseline) to the week after intervention
Time Frame: Assessment of change will take place at pre-intervention (baseline), the week before intervention, after four weeks of intervention, and the week after intervention.

Reading understanding will be measured as a composite of two subtests from the Kaufman Test of Educational Achievement, Third Edition (KTEA-3):

  1. Reading Comprehension
  2. Reading Vocabulary

This standard score will be obtained based on the sum of subtest standard scores according to published norms.

Assessment of change will take place at pre-intervention (baseline), the week before intervention, after four weeks of intervention, and the week after intervention.
Change in Comprehension from pre-intervention (baseline) to the week after intervention
Time Frame: Assessment of change will take place at pre-intervention (baseline), the week before intervention, after four weeks of intervention, and the week after intervention.

Comprehension will be measured as a composite of two subtests from the Kaufman Test of Educational Achievement, Third Edition (KTEA-3):

  1. Reading Comprehension
  2. Listening Comprehension

This standard score will be obtained based on the sum of subtest standard scores according to published norms.

Assessment of change will take place at pre-intervention (baseline), the week before intervention, after four weeks of intervention, and the week after intervention.
Change in Reading Fluency from pre-intervention (baseline) to the week after intervention
Time Frame: Assessment of change will take place at pre-intervention (baseline), the week before intervention, after four weeks of intervention, and the week after intervention.
The Test of Reading Efficiency, Second Edition (TOWRE-2) will be used to measure an individual's ability to pronounce printed words and phonemically regular nonwords accurately and fluently. Standard scores will be obtained according to published norms.
Assessment of change will take place at pre-intervention (baseline), the week before intervention, after four weeks of intervention, and the week after intervention.
Change in Other Academic Skills from pre-intervention (baseline) to the week after intervention
Time Frame: Assessment of change will take place at pre-intervention (baseline), the week before intervention, after four weeks of intervention, and the week after intervention.

Other academic skills will be measured as a composite of remaining subtests from the Kaufman Test of Educational Achievement, Third Edition (KTEA-3) and Woodcock-Johnson-IV Tests of Academic Achievement (WJ-IV):

  1. KTEA-3 Math Concepts & Application
  2. KTEA-3 Math Fluency
  3. KTEA-3 Rapid Automatized Naming Letters
  4. KTEA-3 Spelling
  5. WJ-IV Science
  6. WJ-IV Social Studies
  7. WJ-IV Humanities

This standard score will be obtained based on the z-score of the sum of subtest standard scores at pre-intervention.

Assessment of change will take place at pre-intervention (baseline), the week before intervention, after four weeks of intervention, and the week after intervention.

Secondary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Recidivism within 1 year post-intervention
Time Frame: Within 1 year post-intervention
Recidivism will be computed as a dichotomous variable (yes/no) indicating whether an individual committed an offense within 1 year after participating in the intervention.
Within 1 year post-intervention
Number of days to recidivism within 1 year post-intervention
Time Frame: Within 1 year post-intervention
For individuals who recidivated within 1 year after participating in the intervention, the number of days until the first offense post-intervention will be computed.
Within 1 year post-intervention
Detention within 1 year post-intervention
Time Frame: Within 1 year post-intervention
This secondary outcome will be computed as a dichotomous variable (yes/no) indicating whether an individual has been detained within 1 year after participating in the intervention.
Within 1 year post-intervention
Number of days to detention within 1 year post-intervention
Time Frame: Within 1 year post-intervention
For individuals who were detained within 1 year after participating in the intervention, the number of days until the first detention post-intervention will be computed
Within 1 year post-intervention
Adjudication within 1 year post-intervention
Time Frame: Within 1 year post-intervention
This secondary outcome will be computed as a dichotomous variable (yes/no) indicating whether an individual has been adjudicated within 1 year after participating in the intervention.
Within 1 year post-intervention
Number of days to adjudication within 1 year post-intervention
Time Frame: Within 1 year post-intervention
For individuals who were adjudicated within 1 year after participating in the intervention, the number of days until the first adjudication post-intervention will be computed.
Within 1 year post-intervention

Other Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Changes in decoding skills as assessed by a SmartPhone App
Time Frame: Participants will use the SmartPhone App over a 14-week game-play period. Data will be collected during game play.
A SmartPhone App will be used to assess changes in decoding skills over a 14-week game-play period. Specifically, changes in decoding skills will be measured by tracking the level participants reach in the SmartPhone game. Level is determined by word frequency (a proxy for difficulty).
Participants will use the SmartPhone App over a 14-week game-play period. Data will be collected during game play.
Changes in word reading automaticity as assessed by a SmartPhone App
Time Frame: Participants will use the SmartPhone App over a 14-week game-play period. Data will be collected during game play.
A SmartPhone App will be used to assess changes in word reading automaticity over a 14-week game-play period. Specifically, word reading automaticity will be measured by tracking the speed at which participants are able to make decisions regarding spellings and sounds of words presented during the SmartPhone game
Participants will use the SmartPhone App over a 14-week game-play period. Data will be collected during game play.
Changes in breadth of vocabulary as assessed by a SmartPhone App
Time Frame: Participants will use the SmartPhone App over a 14-week game-play period. Data will be collected during game play.
A SmartPhone App will be used to assess changes in breadth of vocabulary over a 14-week game-play period. Specifically, vocabulary will be measured by tracking the percent correct participants reach on vocabulary tasks in the SmartPhone game.
Participants will use the SmartPhone App over a 14-week game-play period. Data will be collected during game play.

Collaborators and Investigators

This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.

Publications and helpful links

The person responsible for entering information about the study voluntarily provides these publications. These may be about anything related to the study.

General Publications

Study record dates

These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.

Study Major Dates

Study Start (ACTUAL)

May 14, 2018

Primary Completion (ANTICIPATED)

June 30, 2022

Study Completion (ANTICIPATED)

June 30, 2022

Study Registration Dates

First Submitted

July 21, 2017

First Submitted That Met QC Criteria

August 22, 2017

First Posted (ACTUAL)

August 24, 2017

Study Record Updates

Last Update Posted (ACTUAL)

March 2, 2022

Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria

February 25, 2022

Last Verified

February 1, 2022

More Information

Terms related to this study

Plan for Individual participant data (IPD)

Plan to Share Individual Participant Data (IPD)?

NO

Drug and device information, study documents

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated drug product

No

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated device product

No

This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.

Clinical Trials on Specific Learning Disorder (MeSH Unique ID: D000067559)

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