Free resource available for struggling readers during COVID-19 pandemic

This free online resource connects children with strategies and interventions to further their reading during the COVID-19 pandemic.

LiteracyTool2This free online resource connects children with strategies and interventions to further their reading during the COVID-19 pandemic.   Time spent away from the classroom can lead to early reading instruction difficulties. 

Issues surrounding struggling readers at all levels impact literacy rates, according to Jennifer Summerlin, Ph.D., assistant professor in the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Education.  

UAB has an online resource, Electronic Portal for Assistance Learning, to help remedy student difficulties in literacy. The tool helps with reading comprehension, confidence, fluency, phonemic awareness and phonics. The unique resource connects reading difficulties with resources to improve literacy.    

“Literacy in children is a partnership between educators, parents and children,” Summerlin said. “This resource is designed to help facilitators determine difficulties and identify usable strategies to get the child’s literacy to the next level. During this pandemic, it is crucial for parents to continue reading to and with their children.”

Summerlin and Scott Snyder, Ph.D., associate dean for the UAB School of Education, partnered to develop the free EPAL resource to better diagnose and identify the “why” in a child’s reading difficulties. In addition, they wanted resources readily available to facilitators to help the child become a better reader.

The portal is easy to operate. It starts with a series of literacy questions based on the skill level of the reader and the signs that the facilitator may see in the individual. Once a difficulty is determined, the facilitator can use the remediation tab to identify instructional strategies to help the child become a better reader. The strategies offer links to resources and articles to help the facilitator overcome the difficulties in reading.

Resources fall into the following categories:

  • Research studies supporting the effectiveness of the instructional strategy.
  • Specific recommendations for using the instructional strategy for reading remediation.
  • Video demonstrations of the instructional strategy.
  • Online student activities to practice using the instructional strategy.

Visit the Electronic Portal for Assistance Learning website to learn more.