“…Second, early word reading and oral language skills predict concurrent and later reading comprehension (e.g., Cain, Oakhill, & Bryant, 2004; Catts et al, 2015; Dickinson & Porche, 2011; Kieffer & Vukovic, 2012), with word reading demonstrating a stronger connection to reading comprehension than to oral language, especially in the early grades (e.g., Muter et al, 2004; Roth et al, 2002; Storch &Whitehurst, 2002). A third example is that domain-general skills such as working memory and non-verbal reasoning appear directly and indirectly related to concurrent and later reading comprehension (via inferencing and vocabulary), even when other reading skills are controlled (Cain et al, 2004; Lesaux et al, 2007; Kim, 2017; Korpipää et al, 2017; Peng et al, 2018; Swart et al, 2017). Fourth, Lesaux et al (2007) reported that the development of word reading decelerates in the intermediate grades.…”