Balluch, Felicity Marie2016-04-222016-04-222016-05-01http://hdl.handle.net/2097/32603This study investigated the effectiveness of an early literacy program for first grade students classified as at-risk for emotional and behavioral disorders, who were nonresponsive to previous schoolwide interventions, and who performed in the bottom one-third of their class on a standardized reading assessment. This study, which consisted of a multiple-probe across intervention groups experimental design aimed to produce literacy and behavior results previously obtained by other well-known researchers. Results indicated growth in oral reading fluency for all five participants, in nonsense word fluency for four out of the five participants, and a decreased display of total disruptive behaviors for all. Findings reaffirm outcomes obtained in previous investigations; specifically, improved early literacy skills are concomitant with ongoing decreases in disruptive classroom behavior. Limitations are discussed and suggestions for future research are provided.en-USNonsense word fluencyLiteracyEmotional disordersBehavior disordersMultiple probe designOral reading fluencyEarly literacy instruction for first-grade students at-risk for emotional and behavioral disordersDissertation