“…A third group was identified who scored below the population mean on at least two word reading/decoding measures ( WJ 3 Word Identification , Woodcock, McGrew, & Mather, 2001; WJ 3 Word Attack , Woodcock et al, 2001; TOWRE Sight Word and Phonemic Efficiency , Torgesen, Wagner, & Rashotte, 1999) and/or spelling/encoding measures ( TOC Word Choice , Mather, Roberts, Hammill, & Allen, 2008; WIAT 3 Spelling , Pearson, 2009) which also had to be at least a standard deviation below their WISC 4 VCI (Dyslexia Group, N = 65, 37 boys, 28 girls, M = 137.87 months). This approach, which does not require a rigid criterion of severe discrepancy, supports identification of dyslexia across a range of VCI abilities (Lyman, Sanders, Abbott, & Berninger, 2017). A fourth group was identified who scored at or below the 25th percentile on at least two syntax measures for oral and/or written comprehension and/or expression (e.g., WJ 3 Writing Fluency, Woodcock et al, 2001; WIAT 3 Sentence Combining , Pearson, 2009) and had a current and past history of ongoing struggles with one or more language skills at the syntax level (listening and reading comprehension and oral and written expression), which began during the preschool years (OWL LD Group, N = 19, 13 boys, 28 girls, M = 143.29 months).…”