Stockholm university

Rasmus Riad

About me

Licensed speech-language pathologist and PhD-student at Stockholm University.

My current research concern a reading intervention at preschool aiming to develop oral language skills for children. The project has an inclusive approach, meaning that all children attending preschool sites of collaboration are offered partitipation. A majority of participants has Swedish as a second-langauge. The intervention is assesed thorugh vocoabulary and narrative aspects of langauge as well as child well-being. By also employing qualitative modes of enquiry, I attempt to illuminate the aspects of implementation from preschool teachers point of view.

The thesis is based on three articles covering the aspects of planning and performing an intervention in the Swedish preschool context. 

My general research interest lie in the research to practice feedback, sustaining and implement evidence-based practices and various aspects of language development.

I attend the research school of special education that specializes on intervention within the early years of education.

My research is framed within a collaborative network and associated to a project of play and language based interventions in preschool, for more information please visit lekochsprak.com.

Main supervisor: Professor Mara Westling Allodi, (Dept. of Special Education, Stockholm univ.)

Supervisor: Associate prof. Eva Siljehag, (Dept. of Special Education, Stockholm univ.) and Prof. Sven Bölte, KIND, Karolinska Institute)

Publications

A selection from Stockholm University publication database

  • Language skills and well-being in early childhood education and care: a cross-sectional exploration in a Swedish context

    2023. Rasmus Riad (et al.). Frontiers in Education 8

    Article

    Language skills play a vital role in academic achievement and support reading and writing acquisition. Language skills also enable children to interact with others and develop social abilities. Given the predictive value of early language skills for academic attainment and their connection to social interaction, they have been suggested to be an indicator of well-being as well. However, children from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds present lower scores than their peers with a majority language background on standardized language tests, such as vocabulary assessment. In the current study, we examined the relationship between language and self-reported well-being in the school context, based on data from a community sample of 85 five-year-old children attending eight preschools in three Swedish municipalities. Language skills were assessed through measures of vocabulary (receptive and expressive) and narrative skills (MAIN) and were analyzed using structural equation modeling. Narrative ability and vocabulary skills were correlated, but they appear to be distinct constructs. Exposure at home to the majority language was positively associated with vocabulary skills, while narrative ability was not strongly associated with language background. Language skills and well-being were not significantly correlated in the total sample, but post hoc analysis revealed that language background may affect the association. A novel contribution of this study is empirical data on language performance from a community sample with a large proportion of children with diverse language backgrounds. The relationship between subjective well-being and language skills warrants further investigation.

    Read more about Language skills and well-being in early childhood education and care
  • How I Feel about My School—Adaptation and Validation of an Educational Well-Being Measure among Young Children in Sweden

    2021. Rasmus Riad (et al.). International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18 (10)

    Article

    The well-being of children has received increasing attention in recent years. Nevertheless, we lack adequate brief self-report tools that enable us to consider young children’s well-being in policy evaluations and educational research. This study describes the adaptation and first validation of theSwedish version of How I Feel About My School (HIFAMS), a subjective well-being questionnaire suitable for children aged 4 to 12 years, which was originally developed in the United Kingdom (UK). Descriptive statistics with analysis of psychometric properties and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) are based on the perceived well-being of 228 children in preschool and school aged 5 to 8 years old. The CFA endorsed a good fit to a one-factor model, and the scale showed moderate internal consistency (rα = 0.63). The results are largely in line with the findings of the original HIFAMS. We conclude that the Swedish version can be applied in early preschool/school settings and could provide first-hand information about children’s well-being from the first years of education until elementary school grades. Practitioners in early education settings might benefit from HIFAMS assessments when seeking to understand children’s current well-being to provide support to children with special educational needs or children at risk for mental health issues. Researchers could use the HIFAMS to standardize child well-being evaluations in policy evaluations and interventional studies.

    Read more about How I Feel about My School—Adaptation and Validation of an Educational Well-Being Measure among Young Children in Sweden
  • Dialogic book reading within Swedish preschool

    2020. Rasmus Andersson, Mara Allodi Westling, Eva Siljehag.

    Conference

    This project is introducing DBR in the Swedish preschool context through a switching replications design. The participating teachers (n=10) are recruited from a collaborative network, ILTI as well as special educators (n=3) whom is coaching and supporting the preschool teachers. The preschool teachers self-report each reading session, including performed dialogic reading techniques and deviances from manual. The DBR is delivered in small group setting (3-8 children) five times a week, for five consecutive weeks. Selected target words within study consists of tier-2 words, particularly useful because of their general language utility (Beck, McKeown , & Kucan , 2013). The introduction of intensive reading practices within preschool may impact the social climate and child well-being. In order to assess child well-being a brittish questionnaire, How I Feel About My School (HIFAMS, Allen et al., 2017) is used. The HIFAMS is developed by Tamsin Ford et al. (2012) and not previously used in Sweden. Preliminary results indicate no gender differences at baseline and psychometric properties in line with previous results from UK (Allen et al., 2017).

    The study is funded on a grant from the Swedish Research Council (2017-03683) and part of the Research School in Special Education of Early Interventions in Early Childhood Education.

    Read more about Dialogic book reading within Swedish preschool

Show all publications by Rasmus Riad at Stockholm University