Introduction
The analysis of the educational/political situation of the special education student and of the effectiveness of current programs leads one to an array of prevalence figures, spiraling costs and research data, which demonstrate minimal effectiveness against a background of lack of accountabiity. Historically, school systems have produced minimal research reports on effectiveness of their programs, have relied upon tradition to determine procedures and have been unresponsive to the introduction of new research based approaches. For example, over 7,000 schools in New Jersey and New York, every state special education department, every private school/organization in the US (information available on web) specializing in the LD student were contacted (via mail, fax, or phone) regarding the scientific effectiveness of QEEG biofeedback and only one school has actively responded. It took six years before the New York City (NYC) board of education was willing to hear a presentation on the QEEG biofeedback approach. After hearing the presentation, the special education department decided to remain with the Orton-Gillingham method, the most expensive program with the least number of subjects reported in the research and one of the least effective programs.
Education Chancellor Klein (NYC) recently reiterated this concern in his desire to "move from a system that largely fails to provide effective education, that engages in multiple layers of evaluation, and that encourages excuses and non-accountability (Moskowitz, 2003). Despite this message and concern over a 3.2 billion dollar budget for NYC special education, the NYC school system is hiring 1,000 teachers to implement the Orton-Gillingham method (Moskowitz, 2003) and Mel Levine's Schools Attuned program. The results obtained with individual instruction in the Orton-Gillingham method are matched by use of the Orton-Gillingham video tape (Oakland, et al., 1998). Dr. Levine's approach instructs teachers in their approach, with no direct intervention with the students. Research reports either exclude the special education student (Ingemi, 2003), provide data in terms of decreased child study team referrals or classifications (Flores-Brother, 2003), or are difficult to interpret in terms of individual changes or traditional scientific criteria (control groups, maturation effects, confounding effects, etc.) (Carey, 2003).
The estimated prevalence rate for dyslexia is 5-17% of the student population(Temple, 2002). There were 6,272,007 million children who received services for special education needs in 2002 (National Clearinghouse for Profession in Special Education, 2001). Approximately 63% of these children who have specific learning disabilities or problems do not have a secondary disability (Chambers, 2004a).
The federal government has spent between $460 to $500 billion on Special Education since 1975 (Wood, 1998) During the 1999-2000 period 50 billion dollars was spent on special education with an average incremental cost of $8,080 over the cost of educating a normal child (Chambers, 2004b). The additional spending for a child with a specific learning disability averaged $3,500 (Chambers, 2004a). Some 62% (or 31 billion) of the special education expenditures go to direct instruction (Parrish, 2001). The percentage rise in special education costs from 1982 to 1989 was 117% compared to an increment of 67% for general education (Parrish, 2000).
An astonishing 95 percent of theIDEA enrollees (Individuals with Disabilities Education Act) stay in Special Education remedial programs until they leave school (Wood, 1998). "In short, an incredible remedial education army of 1.2 million Title I and Special Education teachers, aides, and professional supporters " approaching the size of the U. S. Armed Forces " is trying to teach remedial reading, math, and language arts to 16 million supposedly disadvantaged and disabled students, who comprise 36 percent of the nation's 45 million public students. And though the 1998 price for their remediation services will probably exceed $65 billion, they are not succeeding and they have never succeeded (Wood, 1998).
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Table 1. Cost structure of programs and effectiveness in standard deviation units, employing a $35/session staff fee and number of sessions reported in theresearch literature for LD and Special Education students.
Method | # Sessions | Cost | SD Effects |
Orton-Gillingham2 | 350 | $12,250 | 0.34 |
Phonics10 | 180 | $6,300 | 0.00 |
Lindamood-Bell3 | 125 | $4,375 | 0.13 |
FastForWord4 | 100 | $3,500 | 0.40 |
Tutoring9 | 75 | $2,625 | grade level reading |
Avg. Incremental Cost of Special Ed. Student11 | ? | $8,080 | ? |
Addt. Spending for Specific LD12 | ? | $3,500 | ? |
Standard QEEG Biofeedback5,6 | 40 | $1,400 | 0.75 |
Activation QEEG Guided Neurotherapy7,8 | 40 | $1,400 | 3.00 |
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Orton (verbal)             Lindamood             FastForWord Standard QEEG Standard QEEG             Activation             Activation
(2)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â (verbal) (3)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â (verbal) (4)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â (attention) (5)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â (IQ) (6)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â QEEG (reading QEEG (auditory
memory) (7)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â memory) (8)
Figure 1. A comparison of different approaches (instandard deviation units-SD) with respect to
differentabilities assessed post treatment.
SD Effects             Cost
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$14,000
$12,000
$10,000
$8,000
$6,000
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Orton             Phonics             Lindamood             FastForWord Standard QEEG Activation QEEG
Figure 2. Cost structure/program and changes in standard deviation (SD) units, showing effectiveness of
programs for LD/special education children.
The figures accompanying this article present a cost/benefit analysis using published research for current intervention approaches to these students. This analysis employs only research reports providing data that could be analyzed with respect to standard deviations of change. The tutoring intervention did not provide information in SD units and was not included in Figures 3 and 4. Table 1 present the numerical values underlying figures 2, 3 and 4. Figures 3 and 4 are double Y axis graphs. These two figures present simultaneous information on two variables across the different intervention models. Initial and post evaluation costs were not calculated for the figures, as these figures are generally not provided. The figures employ a $35 an hour intervention cost across all models, as a rough estimate of what it would cost to implement a program in a school environment (salary plus benefits). The cost figures for New Jersey and Chicago public schools were drawn from public information sources. The question mark indicates that there is no information available on the effectiveness of these programs.
The "activation QEEG guided label reflects a specific neurotherapy approach (Thornton, 2000, 2002; Thornton & Carmody, in press) that employs an activation QEEG database to determine the intervention protocols. The deviation of the subject's electro-cortical activity from normative database values are determined at various cortical sites (in particular for those variables that correlate positively with task performance), and are the focus of the intervention protocols.
The research reports employed differing measures of outcome. Figure 1 presents the methods, the type of variable assessed (in parenthesis), and the effect in standard deviation units. The standard neurotherapy intervention label refers to protocols which reward beta magnivolts (in the 13 to 32 Hertz range) and inhibit theta magnivolts (in the 4 to 8 Hertz range) along the sensorimotor strip (C3-Cz-C4). The effect in standard deviation units was averaged across attention and IQ measures.
To address the question of relative effec
tiveness the following ratio was applied: #
of intervention hours / SD effect. This for
mula reflects how many hours are required
Resource Room (IQ, Reading) (1)
to produce a one standard deviation (SD) amount of change, assuming that effect would continue at the same rate of progress. The lower the number the more effective the treatment. The formula generates the following indices: Orton-Gillingham method - 1029; Lindamood-Bell - 961; FastForWord - 250; Standard QEEG - 53; Activation QEEG - 13. Thus the activation
QEEG approach is 77 times more effective than the Orton-Gillingham method, 72 times more effective than the LindamoodBell, 19 times more effective than the FastForWord program, and 4 times more effective than the standard QEEG approach.
Winter 2004             Biofeedback             3
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1
SD Effects             # Sessions
400
250
200
350
300
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0
150
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Orton             Phonics             Lindamood             FastForWord Standard QEEG Activation QEEG
Bio
Conclusion: Activation QEEG guided neurotherapy is the
most effective program with least # of interventions
Figure 3. Number of sessions and standard deviation
(SD) effects by program type.
Conceptual Differences in Approaches
The interventions presented in this analysis can be conceptualized under two general categories " psychoeducational and psychophysiological. The psychoeducational approaches (Orton-Gillingham, Lindamood-Bell, FastForWord, tutoring, phonics) generally employ an approach based upon research concepts and results emanating from the educational and psychological field. For example, in the reading disability literature deficits are reported in phonic ability, rapid naming, etc. It is then logically assumed that if the interventions are directed towards the reported deficits (phonics), then the ability (reading) will improve. The multisensory Orton-Gillingham method states that dyslexia is caused by neurophysiologically-based disabilities that may be helped by multisensory teaching techniques that provide linkages between the visual, auditory and kinesthetic senses. The approach concentrates on fusing smaller units (letters, sounds, and syllables) into more complex wholes (words). The Lindamood-Bell intervention model follows the five components of reading " phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary and comprehension as specified in the No Child Left Behind Act (lindamood-bell.com). The program is conceptualized as a sensory-cognitive approach, which involves imagery as well as other exercises in the interventions.
Fast ForWord Language is a computer based reading intervention program consisting of seven adaptive exercises to improve auditory and language processing by using nonlinguistic and acoustically modified linguistic speed (rapid frequency transitions in speech are slowed and amplified). Oakland, Black, Stanford, Nussbaum, Balise, et al. (1998, p. 336) stated that a review of the treatment literature on dyslexia "reveals a limited number of scientifically sound and clinically relevant reports of significant treatment effects.
The current scientific trend in this area is to examine the physical response of the brain in learning impaired subjects and changes as a result of treatment. A number of fMRI neuroimaging studies have compared cortical activation patterns under reading related tasks in readers with dyslexia (DYS) and control groups of nonimpaired readers (NI) (Shaywitz, Shaywitz, Pugh, Fulbright, Constable, Mencl, et al., 1998; Shaywitz, Shaywitz, Pugh, Mencl, Fulbright, Skudlarski, et al., 2002; and Shaywitz, Shaywitz, Fulbright, Skudlarski, Mencl, Constable, et al., 2003). This series of studies showed that NI adults increased their activation in posterior superior temporal gyrus, angular gyrus and supramarginal gyrus as the task demands increased from orthographic comparisons to phonological comparisons (Shaywitz, et al., 1998). In contrast, DYS adults showed over-activation in response to increasing task demands in
anterior regions including the inferior frontal gyrus. While NI readers showed activation of a widely distributed system for reading, the DYS readers had disrupted activity in the posterior cortex that involves traditional attentional, visual and language areas. Temple, Deutsch, Poldrak, Miller, Tallal, Merzenich, and Gabrieli (2003) demonstrated a correlation (r = .41, p < .05)
between increased MR signal in left temporo-parietal region and change
in total language score as a result of the FastForWord program
interventions.
QEEG Biofeedback
The QEEG biofeedback/neurotherapy approach continues this trend but assumes that the underlying brain development problem is also reflected in the electrophysiological signals and can be most effectively addressed by a simple operant conditioning paradigm (reference numbers on Figure 1 refer to numbered footnotes). The learning disabled subject is trained via QEEG biofeedback to modify electrical activation patterns in the cortex. The standard QEEG biofeedback research model has indicated that increased (above normal values) magnivolt levels of delta (0-4 Hertz) and theta (4- 8 Hertz) activity are negatively related to general cognitive functioning (IQ measures, attentional abilities) and beta magnivolts (13-32 Hertz) levels are positively correlated with these measures. The locations addressed have traditionally involved the sensorimotor strip (an area historically associated with the reception of sensory signals and efferent motor activity).
The "activation QEEG approach is a further refinement of the standard QEEG biofeedback approach. It addresses the cognition/electrophysiological relationship problem from a broader perspective. The model asserts that the electrophysiology of the brain differentially responds to different tasks in terms of locations, connection patterns and frequencies. In one cognitive task a particular variable may be detrimental to performance while in another task the same variable may aid performance. Therefore, improvement of a specific cognitive ability resides with the improvement of the task relevant variables. The approach also includes an analysis of the higher frequency range (32-64 Hertz), a range often excluded in the more traditional eyes closed databas
Winter 2004             Biofeedback             13
Table 2 -From Data tables (IDEA data tables for OSEP)
 | Number | % of Total |
Total Special Education (IDEA) " ages 6-12 " 2002-2003 | 5,946,202 | Â |
Specific Learning Disabilities " ages 6-12 | 2,878,334 | 0.48 |
Specific Learning Disabilities " with no secondary disability (63%) | 1,813.350 | 0.30 |
Traumatic brain Injury " ages 6-12 | 21,488 | Â |
Speech or Language Impairments " ages 6-12 | 1,112,142 | 0.19 |
Mental Retardation " ages 6-12 | 593,612 | 0.10 |
Developmental Delay " ages 6-12 | 58,265 | 0.01 |
Total Addressable | 4,663,841 | 0.78 |
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es. As can be discerned from the figures provided, this approach appears to provide excellent results for the abilities measured (auditory and reading memory) " improvements of 3 standard deviation units or more (Thornton & Carmody, in press).
The conceptual approach represented by the QEEG biofeedback model is a paradigm shift in the treatment of cognitive difficulties. The model asserts that the most effective method to address these problems is through a direct operant conditioning of the internal physical parameters of brain functioning, and not through externally originating verbal strategies or interventions. This conclusion is supported by the research to date and presents a challenging opportunity for our educational system and political structure to implement.
Conclusion: Potential Cost-Savings
Many critics of QEEG biofeedback have labeled it as an expensive approach, beyond the means of the average family. The present article has shown that QEEG biofeedback is actually a more effective and less expensive approach than many of those interventions undertaken daily in our school systems. Yet these current relatively ineffective interventions are funded annually without discussion.
We will close with an estimate of the cost-savings possible, if activation QEEG guided biofeedback treatment could be
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