3,261 results on '"SILENT reading"'
Search Results
2. Pathways from Morphological Awareness to Reading Fluency: The Mediating Role of Phonological Awareness and Vocabulary
- Author
-
Sophia Giazitzidou, Angeliki Mouzaki, and Susana Padeliadu
- Abstract
The goal of this study was to examine the relation of morphological skills with reading fluency in 2nd grade Greek-speaking children and if phonological awareness and vocabulary mediate their relation. The sample consisted of 105 2nd grade Greek-speaking students (46 males; Mage = 7.83 years, SD = 3.31). Morphological awareness was assessed with four tasks, examining inflectional and derivational morphology both at an epilinguistic and metalinguistic level. Reading fluency was assessed with oral and silent measures. Results of path analyses indicated that inflectional and derivational morphology contributed to reading fluency through multiple pathways, controlling for the effect of Rapid Automatized Naming. Phonological awareness fully mediated the relation of inflectional and derivational morphology with text reading fluency. Vocabulary partially mediated the relation of inflectional and derivational morphology with silent reading fluency. Furthermore, derivational morphology directly affected silent reading fluency. Overall, the relation of morphological awareness with reading fluency appeared to be dynamic and varied depending on the morphological awareness skill and measure of reading fluency. Regarding the mediating role of phonological awareness and vocabulary, the results showed that children in lower elementary grades in a transparent orthography with a rich morphological system used morphological skills as activators to existing phonological and semantic skills in supporting reading fluency processes.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. What If They Are Set Free? Using Autonomous Reading-Listening and Book Clubs in Reading Fluency Development
- Author
-
Isozaki, Anna Husson
- Abstract
Recent research has shown that reading and listening together can be helpful in developing EFL reading fluency, but learner-autonomous bimodal reading research remains scarce. The present study, in an intensive academic English program in Japan, was intended to explore whether reading rates and related reading skills might improve while autonomously reading and listening outside class, holding "book clubs" in class, and while meeting course goals. Within the program setting's trimester sessions, young adult participants carried out extensive reading and listening online at their own pace, followed by small group "book club" discussions, and conducted monthly silent reading rate checks. Participant data collection found the participants (N = 130) reported approximately 64 wpm in overall average gain through their 9-10 week projects. Post-project survey responses and interviews also indicated positive views of book club discussions and possible growth in skills related to increasing fluency, such as mentally "hearing" while reading, and visualizing. Rates of spoken word delivery in audiobooks were measured and compared to reading rates and fluency development markers discussed in research to date. Correlating these with participants' reading rates was found potentially helpful in visualizing ranges in learners' reading fluency development. Further research investigating these points is suggested.
- Published
- 2022
4. The Validity of Two Tests of Silent Reading Fluency: A Meta-Analytic Review
- Author
-
Daniel R. Wissinger, Adrea J. Truckenmiller, Amber E. Konek, and Stephen Ciullo
- Abstract
The purpose of this meta-analysis was to evaluate the potential of two silent reading fluency measures as indicators of reading competence. Specifically, we analyzed score differences between the "Test of Silent Contextual Reading Fluency" (TOSCRF), the "Test of Silent Word Reading Fluency" (TOSWRF), and other standardized measures of reading to determine whether the two silent reading fluency measures were valid indicators of reading competence. Further, potential moderating variables were examined: (a) type of criterion reading measure (i.e., decoding/encoding, word-letter identification, fluency, vocabulary, comprehension); (b) type of silent reading fluency measure (i.e., word vs. contextual); (c) type of learner (English language learner [ELL] status, at risk for a disability; average; above average and gifted); and (e) administration format (i.e., group or individual), and the reading score outcomes. A comparison of effect sizes, across 47 studies and 47,616 participants, revealed the very little score differences between the TOSCRF, TOSWRF, and other standardized measures of reading competence (r = 0.07, very small or trivial). Three moderator variables (English language learner status, type of silent reading fluency measure [word vs. contextual], and administration format [individual vs. group]) did, in fact, moderate effect sizes across studies. A discussion of the implications for using the TOSCRF and TOSWRF as indicators of reading competence, study limitations, and recommendations for future research are included.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A Comparison of Repeated Reading and Listening While Reading to Increase Oral Reading Fluency in Children
- Author
-
Madison E. Maiden, Miguel E. Ampuero, and Douglas E. Kostewicz
- Abstract
Oral reading fluency is crucial to successful reading comprehension. Difficulties to effectively read aloud with fluency often pose challenges to develop more complex reading skills. Although there exists research on teaching oral reading fluency using repeated readings, there is limited research on the effectiveness of listening while reading with error correction procedures for children struggling with reading. Using a single-case, alternating treatments design, this research evaluated the effectiveness of repeated readings with word rehearsal when compared to listening while reading with error correction on the number of words read correctly per minute for three 2nd graders who struggled with reading. In addition, silent reading was assessed as a control condition in this study. The results of this research indicated an acceleration in the correct number of words read as a result of practice, as well as a deceleration of incorrect words read, overall, for both reading interventions. Listening while reading with error correction and repeated reading with word rehearsal did not seem produce a larger effect than the other. However, the implementation of silent reading resulted in both correct and incorrect words accelerating. This may suggest that silent reading may not be as effective as repeated reading and listening while reading. Furthermore, best-quality reading instruction appears to need some form of corrective feedback (e.g., error correction or word rehearsal) to obtain best outcomes for students.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Scaffolding Comprehension with Reading While Listening and the Role of Reading Speed and Text Complexity
- Author
-
Bronson Hui
- Abstract
Audiobooks allow language learners to read and listen to the same text simultaneously; yet the effects of this bimodal input (written and spoken) on learners' comprehension have been inconsistent, suggesting that the conditions under which audiobooks can help comprehension are not well understood. As such, I explored silent reading speed and text complexity as two potential variables that moderate reading-while-listening (RWL) comprehension. In a within-participant design, 46 English learners in an American university read, listened to, and simultaneously read and listened to two complexity versions of a fictional text. Mixed-effects regression modeling revealed that participants comprehended better in the RWL conditions than in the listening-only conditions, echoing findings from the captions literature. This effect was moderated by neither silent reading speed nor text complexity. There were also no main effects between RWL and reading-only conditions, indicating limitations in the use of audiobooks in language classrooms to promote written text comprehension.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Musical Aptitude and Silent Reading Fluency in Adult Multilingual Learners of Spanish: An Exploratory Study
- Author
-
Helena Legaz-Torregrosa, Francisco H. Machancoses, Kris Buyse, and M. Carmen Fonseca-Mora
- Abstract
Skilled adult readers are those who read fluently, but multilingual learners do not always exhibit the same reading proficiency in the different languages they know. Among the variables that influence learners' silent reading fluency, a research trend points to musical aptitude as an individual ability that affects language learners' reading competency. Common auditory features of reading and musical skills have been observed in studies with children and adolescents, but studies involving multilingual adults learning an additional language are scarce. This study aims to observe the potential relationship of multilingual learners' musical aptitude and their silent reading fluency in all the languages the learners know and in Spanish, an additional language they are learning as adults. 157 Flemish university students were tested in Dutch, French, English, and Spanish. Learners' sociocultural data , their musical aptitude and their silent contextual word reading fluency in all languages were tested. In addition, a reading comprehension test in L4 (Spanish) was administered. The statistical results indicate a significant correlation between their musical aptitude and their L1, L2, L3 silent reading fluency, but not with L4 (Spanish).
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Reflecting on the Differences between Young Offenders and Their Typically Developing and Low Achieving Peers: A Comparative Study
- Author
-
Yasser A. Al-Hilawani and Asmaa S. M. Al-Subhi
- Abstract
This study examined the differences among the typically developing, low-achieving, and young offender participants on indices of oral and silent reading, listening comprehension, the Raven and behavior scales, and parental status. A convenient sample of 81 males and females from the same geographical region in the Sultanate of Oman took part in this study. Analyses showed that the typically developing participants obtained a higher Raven score, achieved better on the behavior scale, and performed commensurately with their current grade placement in oral, silent, and listening skills when compared with both the young offenders and low-achieving participants. The academic skills of the young offenders were better than those of the low-achieving participants, a strong indication that the low-achieving group had more serious academic difficulties when compared with the young offenders. The young offenders living with married parents obtained a better score on the adjustment disorder domain than those who had divorced or deceased parents. The results suggested that the young offender and underachieving participants were not entirely identical in their profiles. Implications and limitations are discussed.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Impact of Text-to-Speech Features on the Reading Comprehension of Children with Reading and Language Difficulties
- Author
-
Keelor, Jennifer L., Creaghead, Nancy A., Silbert, Noah H., Breit, Allison D., and Horowitz-Kraus, Tzipi
- Abstract
This study investigated the reading comprehension scores of students with reading and language difficulties after reading a passage with and without text-to-speech (TTS). Students, ages 8 to 12 years, read five passages under the following conditions: (1) "silent read;" (2) "read aloud;" (3) "listen only;" (4) "TTS with no highlighting;" and (5) "TTS with highlighting." Students answered multiple-choice comprehension questions following each condition. Mixed ANOVAs were performed to determine whether "TTS" improved reading comprehension. "TTS" significantly improved comprehension in comparison to "no TTS," and specifically, "TTS with no highlighting" and "TTS with highlighting" resulted in significantly higher comprehension scores compared to "silent read." No other significant differences were found across conditions including between the presentational features of TTS, specifically "TTS with no highlighting" and "TTS with highlighting" conditions. Students were grouped as dyslexia only or reading and language impairment based on their test results. Findings suggested that students with dyslexia only scored significantly higher on reading comprehension questions in all reading conditions and derived significantly more benefit in reading comprehension from "TTS" and the "listen only" condition compared to students with Reading and Language Impairment. Overall, TTS may be a helpful tool for supporting the reading comprehension of students with reading and language difficulties, particularly for students with dyslexia only; however, further studies are needed to explore the benefits of TTS' presentational features such as highlighting with students with reading and language difficulties.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The Relationship between Personality Traits and the Processing of Emotion Words: Evidence from Eye-Movements in Sentence Reading
- Author
-
Johnson, Rebecca L., Wootten, Megan, Spear, Abigail I., and Smolensky, Ashley
- Abstract
Previous research shows that processing times on emotion words (both negative and positive) are faster than on non-emotional neutral words. In the current study, we explored how personality traits (the Big Five and the trait emotional intelligence factors) may further influence the processing of emotion versus non-emotion words by conducting two experiments where participants silently read sentences while their eye movements were recorded. The results replicated the facilitative emotion effect and showed that those with higher agreeableness scores had stronger emotion effects on positive words and those with higher extraversion scores, higher openness scores, higher agreeableness scores, lower sociability scores, and higher emotionality scores had stronger emotion effects on negative words. Furthermore, some personality traits also led to different ways that readers approach text, for example, through more risky reading strategies.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Development of Silent Reading Fluency and Reading Comprehension across Grades 1 to 9: Unidirectional or Bidirectional Effects between the Two Skills?
- Author
-
Psyridou, Maria, Tolvanen, Asko, Niemi, Pekka, Lerkkanen, Marja-Kristiina, Poikkeus, Anna-Maija, and Torppa, Minna
- Abstract
Purpose: This study examines the developmental interplay between silent reading fluency and reading comprehension from Grade 1 to Grade 9 (age 7 to 15) in a large Finnish sample (N = 2,518). Of particular interest was whether the associations are bidirectional or unidirectional. Methods: Children's silent reading fluency and reading comprehension skills were assessed using group-administered tests, at seven time points, in Grades 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, and 9. A random intercept cross-lagged panel model with latent factors was used to identify between- and within-person associations between silent reading fluency and reading comprehension. The use of latent factors allowed for the controlling of measurement error. Results: The model showed that silent reading fluency and reading comprehension correlated at the between-person level, indicating that those who were proficient in one reading skill were typically good at the other also. At the within-person level, however, only some developmental associations emerged: in the early reading acquisition phase (Grade 1-2), silent reading fluency predicted reading comprehension, and in adolescence, reading comprehension weakly predicted silent reading fluency (Grade 7-9). Conclusions: The results thus suggest only weak developmental within-person associations between silent reading fluency and comprehension, although some unidirectional associations emerged with a change in the direction of the associations over time.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Are Both Object and Alphanumeric Rapid Automatized Naming Measures Required to Predict Word Reading Fluency in German Prereaders?
- Author
-
Schoefl, Martin, Seifert, Susanne, Steinmair, Gabriele, and Weber, Christoph
- Abstract
Rapid automatized naming (RAN) powerfully predicts word-level reading fluency in the first 2 years of school as well as further reading development. Here, we analyze various RAN stimuli (objects and digits) and oral/silent word reading (OWR/SWR) modalities to find feasible measures for predicting early reading development. The RAN performances of 127 children starting first grade were assessed. The children's oral and silent word reading skills were then reassessed in the second grade. Linear regression models and relative weight analysis were used to compare reading and screening modalities and further precursors of reading such as phonological awareness and nonverbal IQ were controlled. Scores from the first grade RAN assessment did not differentially predict second grade OWR versus SWR levels. RAN digits predicted word reading development more strongly than RAN objects, which contributed uniquely when predictions used only RAN variables. However, when different precursors of reading were controlled, only RAN digits helped to predict early reading performance.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The Relationship between EFL Oral Reading Fluency and Silent Reading Fluency: What Can a Speed Reading Course Tell Us?
- Author
-
Y?n, Tr?n Th? Ng?c
- Abstract
A great deal of past research in reading fluency has focused on oral reading fluency in L1, but literature in EFL oral reading and silent reading is still in its infancy. This study attempts to examine the development of silent reading fluency in a speed reading course and aims to determine whether an improvement in silent reading speed facilitates oral reading fluency development. The participants were from four intact classes at a university in Vietnam. While the four groups were following the usual English program at the university, the two treatment groups were also following a speed reading course, which lasted two months. In each session of the course, they were asked to read a 550-word text and answered 10 comprehension questions that accompanied the text. The results indicated that the treatment groups significantly improved their reading fluency in and outside the speed reading course, but made minimal increases in oral reading speed.
- Published
- 2021
14. Is Retell a Valid Measure of Reading Comprehension?
- Author
-
Cao, Yucheng and Kim, Young-Suk Grace
- Abstract
Retell is used widely as a measure of reading comprehension. In this meta-analysis, we evaluated the relation between retell and other measures of reading comprehension among students in Grades 1-12. Data from 23 studies (82 effect sizes; N = 4705 participants) showed a moderate relation between retell and other measures of reading comprehension, r = 0.46. Moderation analyses revealed that the relation was stronger when reading comprehension was measured by cloze or maze tasks than when measured using a multiple-choice format. In addition, the relation was weaker in higher grades, but this was largely explained by text genre or the number of prompts in retell. The relation between 'oral' retell and reading comprehension was stronger with a greater number of prompts provided during retell tests. In contrast, results did not differ by other features of retell such as reading mode (oral or silent), text genres of retell (narrative or informational), or use of different oral retell evaluation methods (e.g., number of words or ideas, overall quality). Overall, the moderate magnitude of the relation between retell and other measures of reading comprehension indicates caution for using retell as the sole measure of reading comprehension. The results also indicate a need for a better understanding about more systematic approaches to retell assessment (e.g., number and kind of prompts in the case of oral retell) as a measure of reading comprehension.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Monitoring Reading Component Skills during a Word-Level Intervention for Adolescents with Limited Reading Proficiency
- Author
-
Washburn, Jocelyn
- Abstract
This study examined incremental change for several reading component skills while adolescents were actively learning a word-level intervention and measured pre-/postintervention change in skills. Six ninth graders in two different classes participated during the 2019-2020 academic year. Primary analysis was based on an A-B single-case design across behaviors and participants to observe change in skills proximal to the intervention. Visual analyses of baseline and intervention phase data indicated correlational relationships between the word-level intervention and word identification of multisyllabic words and oral reading fluency. Specifically, an aggregate Tau-U statistical calculation for prosody showed a moderate 0.70 effect size. Secondary analysis indicated a statistically significant group effect for improved strategy knowledge and skill with a 0.90 effect size but no statistically significant group effects for silent reading fluency or sentence comprehension. Discussion includes connections between progress monitoring and reading theory as well as limitations and implications for researchers and practitioners.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Syntactic and Semantic Processing in Japanese Sentence Reading: A Research Using Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS)
- Author
-
Zhao, Licui, Kojima, Haruyuki, Yasunaga, Daichi, and Irie, Koji
- Abstract
In order to examine whether syntactic processing is a necessary prerequisite for semantic integration in Japanese, cortical activation was monitored while participants engaged in silent reading task. Congruous sentences (CON), semantic violation sentences (V-SEM), and syntactic violation sentences (V-SYN) were presented in the experiment. The participants' oxygenated hemoglobin concentration changes during the reading task were measured using functional near-infrared spectroscopy. The results suggest that the CON sentences did not require additional cognitive load on syntactic processing or semantic processing. The V-SEM sentences demanded great cognitive load on semantic processing. Besides, it also elicited great cognitive load on syntactic processing. The V-SYN sentences induced great cognitive load on syntactic processing, but it did not induce additional load on semantic processing. These evidence demonstrates that, in Japanese language processing, the difficultness of semantic processing could influence the difficultness of syntactic processing, while the difficultness of syntactic processing would not influence the difficultness of semantic processing. Our findings are suggestive of the possibility that in Japanese language reading, semantic processing precedes syntactic processing, or semantic processing and syntactic processing are in parallel.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Direct and Indirect Effects of Inhibition and Flexibility to Reading Comprehension, Reading Fluency, and Decoding in Spanish
- Author
-
Escobar, José-Pablo and Rosas Díaz, Ricardo
- Abstract
This research aims to evaluate the predicting role of executive functions, specially inhibition and flexibility, in reading comprehension. Participants were evaluated with inhibition and flexibility measures in first- grade, and later in third- grade their reading comprehension, oral and silent reading fluency, as well as their decoding skills were measured. Results show that first grade inhibition and flexibility are direct predictors of third- grade reading comprehension. When the indirect effect of inhibition and flexibility on reading comprehension was tested through measures of reading fluency and decoding, it was found that neither ORF nor decoding mediates the relationship between the variables. However, it was found that SRF is a variable that mediates the relationship between flexibility and reading comprehension. Results are discussed in the context of the relevance of early measures of inhibition and flexibility to explain reading comprehension and the role of SRF in this relationship.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Rapid Coding of Syllable Structure by Dysfluent Developing Readers
- Author
-
Hintermeier, Lisa, Hautala, Jarkko, and Aro, Mikko
- Abstract
Purpose: The present study investigated whether the number of syllables affects developing readers' word recognition when controlling for word length and word frequency and, if so, whether the effect is dependent on reading fluency. The target language was Finnish, a language with a transparent orthography and a simple syllable structure. Method: Eye movements of 142 third and fourth graders were recorded during silent reading of two stories. Reading fluency was assessed separately. For analyses, a data subset containing words of a certain length (6,7,9 letters) and varying syllable number (2,3,4 syllables) was extracted from the data set. Using linear mixed-effects modeling, the effect of the syllable number on various eye-tracking measures across different levels of reading fluency was studied. Results: Results revealed a statistically significant, impeding number of syllables effect in first fixation duration but non-significant effects in the later reading measures. Furthermore, fluent and dysfluent readers did not differ regarding the number of syllables effect. Conclusion: These findings suggest that in Finnish developing readers, syllabic parsing is a highly rapid and automatized process, which predominantly takes place during the early holistic orthographic processing of a word, and that qualitatively similar orthographic processing occurs in fluent and dysfluent beginning readers.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. A Unitary Measure of L2 Silent Reading Fluency Accounting for Comprehension
- Author
-
Carter, Steven J., Wilcox, Matthew P., and Anderson, Neil J.
- Abstract
This research presents a novel reading fluency (rf) measurement formula that accounts for both reading rate and comprehension. Possible formulas were investigated with 68 participants in a strategic reading course in an IEP at a small Pacific Island university. The selected formula's scores demonstrated concurrent validity through strong correlation (r[66] = 0.680, p < 0.001) with the Adaptive Reading Test (ART), an assessment aligned with ACTFL's proficiency levels. Furthermore, when ART scores were regressed onto formula scores, formula scores accounted for 49% of the variance in ART scores (R[superscript 2] = 0.488, F[1, 66] = 62.88, p < 0.001); these results were comparable to a model in which comprehension and rate were the independent variables (R[superscript 2] = 0.514, F[2, 65] = 34.38, p < 0.001). The formula appears preferable to currently available alternatives and ensures that high performance in reading rate cannot compensate for low performance in comprehension nor vice versa. An Excel workbook for exploring formula variants and tracking learners' fluency is provided to readers of Reading in a Foreign Language.
- Published
- 2023
20. Cheating in Extensive Reading: Myth or Reality?
- Author
-
Hitoshi Mikami and Tadashi Shiozawa
- Abstract
This study addresses the question of whether the use of problematic strategies is a threat to the effectiveness of a specific form of extensive reading. Extensive reading has been considered an effective way to receive comprehensible input in second language learning, and its benefits on the development of second language reading skills have been well documented. Meanwhile, it is also common that extensive reading is implemented as a part of existing language courses. In such courses, learners' performance on comprehension tasks could affect their course grades. A potential concern here is that problematic strategies, including cheating, are employed to increase task performance. Interview and questionnaire surveys were conducted in the English department of a Japanese university, where active efforts are made to realize principle-based extensive reading, and extensive reading performance (i.e., the amount of reading) affects students' course grades. While there were large individual and group differences in the students' behavior, the results provide evidence that the use of problematic strategies is a real threat to the effectiveness of extensive reading. Based on our observations, we also propose some possible ways of promoting positive engagement with extensive reading.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Evaluation of the Reading Habits of Indian Students (Reading Aloud and Reading Silently) from Low, Middle and High Class Schools
- Author
-
Gehlot, Lalit, Al-Khalaf, Hailah A., and Gehlot, Himani
- Abstract
Language acquisition and memory models are created more quickly in the brain in early childhood. If reading habit is cultivated in children early, it will enhance their language skills and perception. This study aims to evaluate the conventional practices of reading habits in Indian children from lower, middle, and upper socio-economic backgrounds and to suggest some new methods based on the results of a survey using semi-structured questionnaires. Generally, reading habits comprise: 'reading aloud' and 'silent reading'. Surprisingly, parents do not know the minuscule details of these two categories of reading habits like the power of reading to build confidence in children or to improve their comprehension of books and many matters in life. This study reviews recent research work in this direction and recommends that there should be strong consciousness to develop children's reading habits, and help them to know first and foremost the vocabulary of all subjects before dealing with the contents of the subjects. It also recommends 'Intensive' and 'Extensive' studies for children to develop reading habit and linguistic competency for comprehending English as Lingua Franca.
- Published
- 2020
22. Assessing the Word Recognition Skills of German Elementary Students in Silent Reading--Psychometric Properties of an Item Pool to Generate Curriculum-Based Measurements
- Author
-
Voß, Stefan and Blumenthal, Yvonne
- Abstract
Given the high proportion of struggling readers in school and the long-term negative consequences of underachievement for those affected, the question of prevention options arises. The early identification of central indicators for reading literacy is a noteworthy starting point. In this context, curriculum-based measurements have established themselves as reliable and valid instruments for monitoring the progress of learning processes. This article is dedicated to the assessment of word recognition in silent reading as an indicator of adequate reading fluency. The process of developing an item pool is described, from which instruments for learning process diagnostics can be derived. A sample of 4268 students from grades 1-4 processed a subset of items. Each student template included anchor items, which all students processed. Using Item Response Theory, item statistics were estimated for the entire sample and all items. After eliminating unsuitable items (N = 206), a one-dimensional, homogeneous pool of items remained. In addition, there are high correlations with another established reading test. This provides the first evidence that the recording of word recognition skills for silent reading can be seen as an economic indicator for reading skills. Although the item pool forms an important basis for the extraction of curriculum-based measurements, further investigations to assess the diagnostic suitability (e.g., the measurement invariance over different test times) are still pending.
- Published
- 2020
23. A Comparative Evaluation on Silent and Read-Aloud Revisions of Written Drafts
- Author
-
Çetinkaya, Gökhan
- Abstract
This study aimed to explore the effect of silent and read-aloud revision methods on revising the written drafts of students. In the study, 50 fourth-grade university students took part as the participants of the research. The participant students were asked to write two different drafts with 250-300 words each during data collection process. Consequently, they were asked to revise the first text silently and the second one aloud. The drafts written were copied and reviewed by two different experts, and deviations to be corrected or improved were marked on the papers and annotations were added where necessary. Marks and annotations provided by the two experts were recorded on the "form for identifying and classifying the deviations in written texts" previously developed by the researchers. The participants' self-evaluations of their own texts were recorded on the same form. The data noted on the form were transferred to the statistical program to analyze. Frequency, percentage, mean scores, paired samples t-test were utilized in the data analysis, and p=.05 was set to be the significance level in the interpretation of the results. The result of the data analysis illustrated that the participants had moderate revision skills; their read-aloud revision as a surface evaluation and their silent revision as a semantic evaluation were found more functional.
- Published
- 2020
24. Are There Individual Differences in Learning Homophones during Silent Reading?
- Author
-
Deibel, Megan Elizabeth and Folk, Jocelyn R.
- Abstract
The present study evaluated if lexical expertise, defined as the quality and quantity of a reader's word representations, influenced college students' ability to learn novel homophones while reading. In two experiments novel homophones (e.g. 'brale') and novel nonhomophones (e.g. 'gloobs') were embedded in sentences. In Experiment 1, novel homophones had low-frequency familiar word mates, and in Experiment 2 they had high-frequency familiar word mates. Learning was assessed with meaning and spelling recognition post-tests. Although eye movements during reading did not differ between the word types, participants had more difficulty learning the spellings of the novel homophones compared to the novel nonhomophones in Experiments 1 and 2. In contrast, participants only had difficulty learning the meaning of novel homophones when it had a low-frequency mate. Higher levels of lexical expertise were related to higher learning rates of novel homophone spellings only when the novel homophones had a high-frequency mate. Phonology is activated when novel words are encountered and can interfere with learning under certain circumstances.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Do Oral and Silent Word-Reading Fluency Rely on the Same Cognitive-Linguistic Skills? Evidence from a Cross-Sectional Study in Greek
- Author
-
George K. Georgiou and Kyriakoula Rothou
- Abstract
Researchers tend to use oral- and silent-reading fluency measures interchangeably and to generalize research findings across reading modes, especially from oral to silent reading. In this study, we sought to examine if oral and silent word-reading fluency rely on the same cognitive-linguistic skills. Three hundred and forty-five Greek children (80 from Grade 2, 85 from Grade 4, 91 from Grade 6, and 89 from Grade 10) were assessed on measures of general cognitive ability, speed of processing, phonological awareness, rapid automatized naming, orthographic knowledge, articulation rate, and word-reading fluency (oral and silent). Results of hierarchical regression analyses revealed that phonological awareness was a unique predictor of both reading outcomes in Grade 2 and orthographic knowledge was a unique predictor of both reading outcomes in Grades 4, 6, and 10. However, rapid automatized naming predicted only oral word-reading fluency. These findings suggest that silent and oral word-reading fluency do not necessarily rely on the same cognitive-linguistic skills at the same grade level and we need to exercise some caution when we generalize the findings across reading modes.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The Same yet Different: Oral and Silent Reading in Children and Adolescents with Dyslexia
- Author
-
van den Boer, Madelon, Bazen, Loes, and de Bree, Elise
- Abstract
Dyslexia is characterized by poor word reading. In research, education, and diagnosis, "oral" reading is commonly assessed, and outcomes are generalized to "silent" reading, although similarities and differences between oral and silent reading are poorly understood. We therefore compared oral word reading, oral text reading and silent text reading. Children (n = 40; aged 8-11) and adolescents (n = 54; aged 14-18) with dyslexia, and typical readers (n = 18, and n = 24 respectively), read a word-list and an age-appropriate text aloud, and silently read a text including instructions for simple tasks. Whereas oral and silent reading fluency were comparable for children, silent reading was more fluent than oral reading for adolescents. Importantly, the silent reading deficit of children and adolescents with dyslexia was as large as in oral reading or larger, highlighting the need for a focus on both reading modes in research, diagnosis and treatment of dyslexia.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Reading Warm-Up, Reading Skill, and Reading Prosody When Reading the My Grandfather Passage: An Exploratory Study Born out of the Motor Planning Theory of Prosody and Reading Prosody Research
- Author
-
Boutsen, Frank, Park, Eunsun, and Dvorak, Justin D.
- Abstract
Purpose: The Motor Planning Theory of Prosody and reading prosody research indicate that "out of the blue" oral reading, as practiced in clinical and research settings, invokes surface rather than covert prosody, particularly when readers are recorded, less skilled, and/or speech impaired. Warm-up is not considered in passage reading for motor-speech assessment. We report on a preliminary study aimed to investigate the effect of warm-up on reading prosody in two conditions: silent reading alone and reading "out of the blue" followed by silent reading. A secondary aim of the study was to examine the effect of reading skill on reading prosody. Method: Twenty-one monolingual, English-speaking volunteers were recorded reading the My Grandfather Passage (GP) while their eye movements were tracked. Participants were randomly assigned to one of two reading conditions: (a) silent-oral (SO) and (b) oral-silent-oral (OSO). In the SO condition, participants read the GP silently as a warm-up for the subsequent oral reading. In the OSO condition, participants first read the GP aloud ("out of the blue") and then read the same passage silently with the instruction to do this in preparation for a second oral reading. Reading skill was quantified using eye-voice span and Wide Range Achievement Test--Fourth Edition testing. Reading prosody was evaluated using pause indexes, the Acoustic Multidimensional Prosody Index, and speech rate. Conclusions: One oral reading before a silent reading but not a silent reading alone before oral reading was shown to affect reading prosody. In terms of reading skill, results indicate that predictive associations patterned differently in the reading conditions explored, suggesting different underlying skill sets.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Text-to-Speech Applications to Reduce Mind Wandering in Students with Dyslexia
- Author
-
Bonifacci, Paola, Colombini, Elisa, Marzocchi, Michele, Tobia, Valentina, and Desideri, Lorenzo
- Abstract
Background: Mind wandering--that is, a shift in the contents of thought away from an ongoing task--can have detrimental consequences for students' reading comprehension. To date, no evidence is available on the effects of text-to-speech solutions on rates of mind wandering during reading. Objectives: The study aimed to evaluate the effects of text-to-speech technology on frequency of mind wandering and reading comprehension in young students with dyslexia (20) and typical development (50). Methods: Students were presented, on a personal computer, texts and comprehension questions in two modalities: self-paced silent reading and text-to-speech reading. Comprehension scores and mind wandering occurrence were considered. A battery of cognitive tasks and questionnaires on mind wandering and emotional traits was also included. Results: There were no differences in baseline rates of mind wandering between the two groups. In the text-to-speech condition, both groups showed better reading comprehension and reduced rates of mind wandering. Students with dyslexia were significantly more on task in the text-to-speech condition compared to the self-paced reading condition. Implications: These results suggest that text-to-speech might represent a reading solution that allows students with Dyslexia to diminish mind wandering during text-to-speech reading.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Unpacking Eye Movements during Oral and Silent Reading and Their Relations to Reading Proficiency in Beginning Readers
- Author
-
Kim, Young-Suk, Petscher, Yaacov, and Vorstius, Christian
- Abstract
Our understanding about the developmental similarities and differences between oral and silent reading and their relations to reading proficiency (word reading and reading comprehension) in beginning readers is limited. To fill this gap, we investigated 368 first graders' oral and silent reading using eye-tracking technology at the beginning and end of the school year. Oral reading took a longer time (greater rereading times and refixations) than silent reading, but showed greater development (greater reduction in rereading times and fixations) from the beginning to the end of the year. The relation of eye-movement behaviors to reading proficiency was such that, for example, less rereading time was positively related to reading proficiency, and the relation was stronger in oral reading than in silent reading. Moreover, the nature of relations between eye movements and reading skill varied as a function of the child's reading proficiency such that the relations were weaker for poor readers, particularly at the beginning of the year. The relations between eye movements and reading proficiency stabilized in the spring for children whose reading skill was 0.30 quantile and above, but weaker relations remained for readers below 0.30 quantile. These findings suggest the importance of examining eye-movement behaviors in both oral and silent reading modes and their developmental relations to reading proficiency.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Reading Comprehension Level among Intermediate Learners
- Author
-
Miñoza, Manilyn Vegare and Montero, Marites Atilano
- Abstract
The data of this descriptive correlational-study revealed that there is no significant difference in the level of comprehension in silent reading, between males and females. Moreover, in terms of the level of comprehension in oral reading, there is gender difference with females outperforming the males. In the first language, no significant relationship was drawn as both p-values are greater than alpha = 0.05. Interestingly, on socio-economic status,this influences the level of reading comprehension in SR (p-value = 0.000) as the p-value is less than alpha= 0.05. Moreover, the post hoc analysis using the Tukey test showed a significant difference between groupings, for the comprehension level in silent reading, between respondents of high SES and average and low SES with better SES outperforming those with lower SES. Likewise, a significant difference in the level of reading comprehension on SR was also revealed between those with average SES and low SES favoring those who have claimed to belong to average SES. However, There is no significant relationship between the level of comprehension in OR and the variables SES and Parental Involvement (PI) as shown by their respective p-values (0.280, 0.057) which are greater than alpha = 0.05. For the relationship between the dependent variable reading comprehension in SR and the independent variable SES, no significant relationship was drawn as shown by the p-value (0.728) which is greater than alpha = 0.05. Furthermore, for the influence of PI on the level of comprehension of the respondents in SR, a significant relationship was drawn as provided by the p-value (0.004) which is less than alpha = 0.05. Moreover, the relationship is characterized to be a low positive correlation. In addition, there is no significant difference in the level of comprehension in OR across SES.
- Published
- 2019
31. Does Reading Literacy Instruction Vary According to Language or Culture? Similarities and Differences in English-, German- and French-Speaking Education Systems in PIRLS 2016. IEA Compass: Briefs in Education Number 4
- Author
-
International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA) (Netherlands), Lafontaine, Dominique, Dupont, Virginie, and Schillings, Patricia
- Abstract
PIRLS 2016 data from eight education systems were used to examine how teachers from three different language groups differed in their teaching of reading literacy. Teaching reading practices differed substantially between the three linguistic/cultural groups. In English-speaking systems, effective practices for establishing reading literacy seem well implemented, but there is still room for more consistent implementation in German-speaking and French-speaking education systems.
- Published
- 2018
32. Rhetorical Listening through Sketchnoting: From Dysfunctional Silence to Functional Rhetoric
- Author
-
Sascha Skucek
- Abstract
When you look at an image, what do you see? What does the image say to you? What do you think about? What meaning do you infer? These questions may blur together, but they can be expanded individually and uniquely into a multitude of responses. Your initial thoughts are yours. You are silently debating meaning within yourself. If I interject a new interpretation, how does it change your perspective? How do you compare my meaning with yours? Now add that the image has been drawn to relate to a particular text, such as a poem or short story. Your thoughts and perspective on a particular image are now compounded with the text you are reading. Add the author's intent in writing the text. Now, meaning of a drawing may be compounded with your perceived meaning of a text and compared to the intentions of an author. Add the artist of the drawing. What were their intentions in interpreting the text? What did they mean when they drew this? Next, bring the artist across from you and have a dialog. Exchange your meaning with theirs. How do your meanings relate? The resulting discourse makes our initial silence functional, our listening deeper, and our rhetoric more engaging. It develops our senses of creativity, interpretation, and analysis, as well as our relationship to each other. In this dissertation, I examine silence as an opportunity in the English classroom, a contemplative space of potential for nondiscursive rhetoric. Silences can be positive and negative. When silence is used to generate meaning through creative invention, ideation, and arrangement of thought, it becomes rhetorical. Negative silences, such as Ratcliffe's (2005) "dysfunctional silence", hinder functional discourse within the classroom. When students feel unable, unwilling, threatened, or lack focus to express themselves, they may remain silent and stall their ability to develop thoughts and elevate both nondiscursive and discursive composition. Ratcliffe (2005) advocates for the use of "rhetorical listening" to cut through dysfunctional silence. This involves student intent and focus on what is being communicated, such as through a text or interlocutor in order to evolve meaning. Ratcliffe's definition for "rhetorical listening" is similar to the concepts of listening by philosophers such as Confucius (Brown, 2018) and Socrates, and theorists like Carl Rogers (1957) and Wayne Booth (2004). Without an engaged listener, discourse amounts to dysfunctional rhetoric. In order to listen, we must first learn to harness the rhetoric of silence. I studied the effects of drawing, or sketchnoting (Rohde, 2013), during literary discussions in the English classroom in order to unravel its effectiveness as a means for nondiscursive expression. I used a grounded theory approach within a qualitative study to determine whether students drawing could help them overcome dysfunctional silence and offer them an outlet even when they chose to remain silent during class discussions. Results showed that sketchnoting helped students meet course learning outcomes, both in composition and literature courses, developed student ideation, both creatively and critically, and developed a cognitive practice for rhetorical listening to prevent dysfunctional silence. Even students who remained unable, unwilling, or felt threatened to express themselves discursively, demonstrated deliberate focus and engagement in course concepts by manifesting their thoughts visually. This led to more-productive discourse within the classroom and gave students practice in modes of expression in addition to speaking and writing. I wrote this dissertation for any teacher who has experienced the silent eyes in a classroom staring back at them. The act of asking students to draw their thoughts relating to course lectures, class discussions, exercises, and activities can enrich dialog, promote meaning-making, and affirm teacher intentions for creative, academic, and professional pursuits. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
- Published
- 2022
33. The Sound of Silence: Investigations of Implicit Prosody
- Author
-
Nicholas J. Van Handel
- Abstract
This dissertation is about implicit prosody, the prosodic structure that readers assign during silent reading. The dissertation has several goals: determining which reading tasks are appropriate for studying implicit prosody, establishing how grammatical principles could guide incremental assignment of prosodic structure, and investigating how implicit prosody interacts with other properties such as focus in order to influence syntactic parsing and interpretation. On the methodological side, this dissertation demonstrates that the Maze task is suitable for studying implicit prosody by replicating several major findings on metrical and phrasal prosody in both the Maze task and in self-paced reading. In addition to showing that the Maze is sensitive to implicit prosody, the methodological comparison confirms previously reported advantages of the Maze over self-paced reading, such as more localized and larger effects. On the theoretical side, the dissertation lays the groundwork for developing an incremental model of prosodic parsing. I provide an overview of the major grammatical constraints that govern the syntax-prosody interface, drawing on work from the theoretical phonology literature. I discuss how and when these grammatical constraints, which are typically invoked to model the final phrasing for a complete sentence structure, could be deployed by an incremental parser that assigns a prosodic structure word-by-word. Using a toy model of an incremental parser, I also show how the parser's first pass implicit prosody may differ from the final prosody, arguing that future work in this area should more closely consider these potential differences. The final set of experiments investigates both the timing of implicit prosodic assignment and how prosodic structure and information structure affect attachment decisions. Based on the results of these experiments, I propose the Visibility First Hypothesis, according to which attachment decisions are determined primarily by prosodic visibility, while other factors such as focus only exert an influence when two potential attachment sites are equally visible. I then outline several experiments to test the Visibility First Hypothesis in future work. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
- Published
- 2022
34. Relationship among EFL Reading Comprehension, Silent Reading Rate, Vocabulary, and Reading Motivation
- Author
-
Savasci, Merve and Akyel, Ayse S.
- Abstract
As a subset of the large-scale research on several issues related to EFL reading comprehension and instruction, this study investigates the potential relationship among English as a Foreign Language (EFL) reading comprehension, silent reading rate, vocabulary knowledge (i.e., receptive and productive vocabulary knowledge), and reading motivation (i.e., intrinsic and extrinsic reading motivation), as well as the relative contribution of each of these factors to EFL reading comprehension. Data were collected through a reading comprehension and rate test, receptive and productive vocabulary tests, and a reading motivation questionnaire administered to university level EFL learners enrolled in a state university in Turkey. Findings indicated a positive, moderately significant correlation between receptive and controlled productive vocabulary knowledge (p < 0.05) and a weak but significantly positive correlation between silent reading rate and reading motivation (p < 0.05). Findings also showed that silent reading rate and intrinsic reading motivation significantly predicted EFL reading comprehension (p < 0.05). Implications for pedagogy and suggestions for future EFL reading research are discussed.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Examining the Effects of Silent Independent Reading on Reading Outcomes: A Narrative Synthesis Review from 2000 to 2020
- Author
-
Erbeli, Florina and Rice, Marianne
- Abstract
Encouraging children to read extensively has been a widely recommended approach to developing reading. The National Reading Panel published a review study reporting inconclusive findings regarding the benefits of such an approach. In this systematic narrative synthesis review, we provided an update and an extension of the NRP's review. We examined the effects of silent independent reading practices on reading outcomes for students in Grades K through 12, reviewing experimental and quasi-experimental studies between 2000 and 2020. We also incorporated a quality evaluation of primary studies. A systematic search of peer-reviewed articles was conducted, using identical procedures as in the National Reading Panel review. Our results from 14 primary studies comprising 5,522 participants in the treatment group and 4,966 in the control group alluded to no meaningful beneficial effects of independent reading on reading outcomes. However, due to a lack of primary studies adhering to the highest quality standards and implementation, it is impossible to determine whether such a result is universal or whether there might be conditions under which independent reading could be effective.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Personalized Expert Guidance of Students' Book Choices in Primary and Secondary Education
- Author
-
Sande, Lisa van der, Wildeman, Ilona, Bus, Adriana G., and van Steensel, Roel
- Abstract
In many schools, independent silent reading of self-selected books is used to promote reading. However, self-selection may be insufficient to counter negative reading experiences, particularly when students choose books not attuned to their reading level and interest. Two studies experimentally tested whether personalized expert guidance when selecting books could prevent a reading attitude decline. Study 1 focused on readers in prevocational secondary education (Grades 7 and 8; N = 136). Study 2 included younger readers from primary education (Grades 4-6, N = 99). Students in the experimental condition met with a librarian to discuss book choices every two weeks for three months. In both studies, the intervention stabilized the reading attitude decline, although, in Study 1, only for more advanced readers. In Study 2, reading comprehension of the most proficient readers also improved. This indicates that guidance in selecting books can preserve students' reading attitude and increase reading proficiency growth.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Exploring Correlates of Braille Reading Performance in Working-Age and Older Adults with Visual Impairments
- Author
-
Martiniello, Natalina, Barlow, Meaghan, and Wittich, Walter
- Abstract
Tactile, motor and cognitive capacities decline with age, but little is known about how this relates to braille reading outcomes. This study investigated correlates of braille reading speed among working-age and older adults. Texts were read in two modes (oral/silent) and two media (paper/electronic braille display) by 46 blind adults (age range 23-88) who learned braille between the ages of 4 and 63. Participants completed demographic questionnaires and tests of tactile acuity, fine-motor dexterity and working-memory. A relationship between decreased performance in tactile sensitivity and increased age was observed, but no relationship between increased age and braille reading speed was found. Active tactile acuity, reading frequency and braille learning age were significantly correlated with braille reading speed. No significant difference based on medium was observed, though silent reading was significantly faster than reading aloud. Findings underscore the importance of providing opportunities for older braille learners to secure training and to have frequent opportunities to practice braille between sessions. Findings also challenge the suggestion that increased age alone will impede braille learning. The most significant barrier faced by older braille learners is not their age, but challenges that could instead be addressed through policy and practice changes.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Developmental Trajectories of Eye Movements in Oral and Silent Reading for Beginning Readers: A Longitudinal Investigation
- Author
-
Kim, Young-Suk Grace, Little, Callie, Petscher, Yaacov, and Vorstius, Christian
- Abstract
Eye movements provide a sensitive window into cognitive processing during reading. In the present study, we investigated beginning readers' longitudinal changes in temporal and spatial measures of eye movements during oral versus silent reading, the extent to which variation in eye movements is attributable to individual differences and text differences, and the functional form of growth trajectories of eye-movement variables. Data were from 363 English-speaking children (52% male; 59.8% White) in the US who were followed longitudinally from Grade 1 to Grade 3. Results showed a rapid decrease in temporal eye-movement measures (e.g., first fixation) and an increase in spatial eye-movement measures (initial landing position) in both oral and silent reading. The majority of variance in eye movements was attributable to individual differences whereas some variance in initial landing position was due to text differences. Most eye-movement measures had nonlinear growth trajectories where fast development tapered off near the end of Grade 3 while initial fixation count and total gaze count in silent reading had a linear growth trajectory. The findings provide a first large-scale look into the developmental progression of eye movements during oral and silent reading during a critical period when reading skills rapidly develop.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Exploring the Associations between Reading Skills and Eye Movements in Elementary Children's Silent Sentence Reading
- Author
-
Lee, Sungyoon, Woltering, Steven, Prickett, Christopher, Shi, Qinxin, Sun, Huilin, and Thompson, Julie L.
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate the associations between elementary students' reading skills and their online reading (i.e., real-time reading) behaviors during silent sentence processing. Thirty-five students participated in this study and their eye movements were recorded during sentence reading tasks. The effects of students' reading skills measured by traditional standardized measures were investigated for widely-used eye tracking measures such as first fixation duration, gaze duration, regression path duration, total duration, word skipping, fixation count, and regression frequency. The eye tracking measures were chosen to represent early/late cognitive processes and temporal/spatial gaze behaviors. Linear mixed-effects regression analyses revealed that children's performances in reading skills predict most of the eye tracking measures.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. When Students Perform at the below Basic Level on the NAEP: What Does It Mean and What Can Educators Do?
- Author
-
Hiebert, Elfrieda H.
- Abstract
According to interpretations of results from the latest oral reading fluency (ORF) study conducted by the National Assessment of Educational Progress (White et al., 2020), fourth-grade students who score below the basic standard require interventions that focus on word recognition, phonological decoding, and fluency. Before such mandates for students at the middle grades and beyond are enacted, the available information from ORF assessments should be examined from the view of what students know and what they do not know. In this paper, I examine the performances of students who score below the basic level on oral reading assessments such as those used in the NAEP/ORF study to identify students' strengths and challenges. Results of analyses of students' performances are used to address how instruction and interventions can best support students in developing the proficiencies required to perform successfully on silent reading comprehension tasks. Issues that particularly require attention in the design of instruction and interventions for readers in the middle grades who score below the basic level are the mode of reading (silent or oral), text, and reading volume.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The Interaction of Silent Reading Rate, Academic Vocabulary, and Comprehension among Students in Grades 2-12
- Author
-
Spichtig, Alexandra N., Pascoe, Jeffrey P., Gehsmann, Kristin M., Gu, Fei, and Ferrara, John D.
- Abstract
This study examined silent reading rates (SRRs) in relation to students' estimated academic vocabulary grade levels (EVGLs) and comprehension accuracy (Comprehension Items Correct; compIC). Analyses were based on data from 288,934 students in grades 2-12 who completed an adaptive silent reading assessment that yielded measures of the three variables of interest. Silent reading rate was measured while students read five 150- to 300-word passages. Each student's initial passage difficulty was aligned with their EVGL. Each passage was followed by five comprehension questions, such that in total, students could answer up to 25 comprehension items correctly. Two-level Multilevel Models (MLMs) were fitted to evaluate SRR in relation to EVGL, compIC, and their interactions. The final MLM included the random intercept and three random slopes for the two level-1 predictors (school-mean-centered EVGL as the focal predictor and school-mean-centered compIC as the moderator) and their interactions. Results indicated that: (a) the fixed effect of higher EVGL on SRR was positive and significant, (b) the fixed effect of higher compIC on SRR was negative and significant, and (c) there was a significant interaction indicating that the relationship between school-mean-centered EVGL and SRR grew stronger as school-mean-centered compIC increased. These results suggest that vocabulary knowledge and SRR increase in concert among students with good comprehension, whereas SRRs measured in the absence of good comprehension are less meaningful and may indicate inadequate skills or insufficient motivation to fully comprehend what is being read.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Cultivating STEAM Literacy: Emphasizing the Implementation of the Arts through Reading Practices Supporting the Asian Diaspora
- Author
-
Park, Jennifer C.
- Abstract
This paper explores the cultivation of STEAM literacy through the employment of practices derived from traditional reading strategies. This teaching and learning framework focuses on utilizing multimodal texts to increase exposure and opportunities for students to creatively explore diverse realms of STEM through the arts. Featuring student-centered endeavors through self-selected texts and in-class reading practices followed by tiered scaffolded discourse engagements, this framework initiates greater interest, autonomy, and culturally and linguistically authentic practices enhancing STEAM literacy. Embedded in the implications is the deconstruction of frequently aggregated STEM data that "overrepresents" the Asian demographic. Using the lens of the model minority myth, this paper attempts to disaggregate the Asian category, illuminating the actual diaspora that makes up the Asian and Asian American communities, many of which are not represented in STEM fields. Through more reading opportunities and fostering discourse practices, the arts contribute greater inclusion, cultivating STEAM literacy for "all" students.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Paper or Digital Text: Which Reading Medium Is Best for Students with Visual Impairments?
- Author
-
McLaughlin, Ramona and Kamei-Hannan, Cheryl
- Abstract
Introduction: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the differences in silent and oral reading speed, reading comprehension, and reading errors in two formats, large print paper and the iPad2, for students with visual impairments (that is, those who are blind or have low vision). Methods: A single-subject alternating randomized treatment design was used with three participants. The intervention consisted of instruction on the use of an iPad. Data regarding reading speed, reading miscues, and comprehension were collected. Data were analyzed visually and descriptively. Results: All participants demonstrated a slightly higher reading speed, equal comprehension rates, and decreased error rates using the iPad2 compared to paper. Discussion: Results indicated that using an iPad for reading may have an effect on reading fluency and comprehension for students with low vision. Implications for practitioners: Students with low vision, particularly those with more severe vision loss, may benefit from the use of electronic tablets that allow one to adjust font size, style, color, and contrast. Users should be taught how to manipulate the visual display of text and be allowed time to adjust to an electronic medium.
- Published
- 2018
44. Examination of Factors Affecting Students' Reading-Comprehension Achievement with Structural Equation Modeling
- Author
-
Ülper, Hakan, Çetinkaya, Gökhan, and Dikici, Ayhan
- Abstract
It is noted in the light of several studies associated with the reading-comprehension skills that fluent word reading, connectives knowledge and fluent text reading are closely related to the comprehension skill. Hence it seems possible to create a model over these concepts and their interrelationships. Within the scope of this research two different models are proposed considering theoretical information. The study group of the research was composed of 263 secondary school students at a state school in Burdur province. Three different confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) were performed to see whether factor structures were confirmed on the sample by using the maximum estimate method of the AMOS 18 software. Analysis of Covariance and Multivariate Analysis of Covariance were performed to determine whether the demographic variables grade level and gender had a significant effect on the scale scores. These analyzes were also performed in the SPSS 18 program. It has been found that as the grade level of the students increases, connective usage knowledge increases, the fluent silent word reading, the fluent silent text reading, the reading comprehension and the academic achievements increase as the grade level increases. This research concluded that reading comprehension strongly and significantly predicted academic achievement. But however, fluent silent text reading did not predict reading comprehension significantly. According to the results of the research, the model formed by the sub-dimensions of binding usage information shows better fit.
- Published
- 2018
45. Investigating the Effect of Reading Types Used in Turkish Lessons upon 5th Grade Students' Reading Comprehension
- Author
-
Savaskan, Vafa
- Abstract
Reading that is the activity of identifying and interpreting the symbols in a text is essential in terms of broadening the horizon of individuals through learning new words, acquiring new understandings, and developing the creativity. Because reading is a learning domain that provides significant contribution upon mental development, it takes place in curriculums and teaching process. In order to fulfill a successful reading action, it is necessary to determine which type of reading practiced in a classroom environment is more efficient. Although implementing a type of reading constantly indicates it as successful, this is possible to change in some occasions. The purpose of this research was to determine the effect of reading types used in Turkish lessons upon 5th grade students' reading comprehension. In accordance with this purpose, each of the seven texts chosen by the researcher was provided to be read by a student group including twenty students through seven different reading types, and the students were also asked to answer comprehension questions prepared also by the researcher. In order for evaluating these questions, "Error Analysis Inventory" developed by Ekwall and Shanker and adapted into Turkish by Akyol was benefited. In the research, experimental design with post-test control group was used. At the end of the study, it was determined that silent reading affected the comprehension of students most with the rate of 81.4%, and reading by taking notes affected students' comprehending what they read least with the rate of 27.3%. The findings obtained in the research were discussed, and subsequently, suggestions were offered in accordance with the results after interpretation.
- Published
- 2017
46. Sandhi-Tone Words Prolong Fixation Duration during Silent Sentence Reading in Chinese
- Author
-
Pan, Jinger, Zhang, Caicai, Huang, Xunan, and Yan, Ming
- Abstract
The current study examined whether or not lexical access is influenced by detailed phonological features during the silent reading of Chinese sentences. We used two types of two-character target words (Mandarin sandhi-tone and base-tone). The first characters of the words in the sandhi-tone condition had a tonal alternation, but no tonal alternation was involved in the base-tone condition. Recordings of eye movements revealed that native Mandarin Chinese readers viewed the base-tone target words more briefly than the sandhi-tone target words when they were infrequent. Such articulation-specific effects on visual word processing, however, diminished for frequent words. We suggest that a conflict in tonal representation at a character/morpheme level and at a word level induces prolongation in fixation duration on infrequent sandhi-tone words, and conclude that these tonal effects appear to reflect articulation simulation of words during the silent reading of Chinese sentences.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Prosodic Cues in Relative Clauses Disambiguation: Bilinguals vs. L2 Learners
- Author
-
Checa-Garcia, Irene
- Abstract
This study investigates the preferences for attachment of a relative clause (RC) to a complex noun phrase (NP) of the type: NP1 of NP2, in Spanish-English bilinguals and advanced learners of Spanish. Spanish speakers show a moderate preference for attaching the RC to the first NP, while speakers of English prefer the second NP. Subjects were presented this construction in written (Experiment 1) and oral (Experiment 2) forms. Results show no group had a preference for either attachment in silent reading, Low Attachment was preferred with a pause after NP1 by learners, and High Attachment was preferred in the absence of any pause by bilinguals and learners. However, the learner group behaved distinctively in Experiment 2 in two ways: their reaction times were shorter, and their choice for the kind of RC attachment was more sensitive to the absence of a pause being more likely to choose Low Attachment, as English monolinguals. These results suggest that advanced learners are influenced by their L1 more heavily in oral comprehension than in reading, while bilinguals take longer for processing prosodic cues. Reasons for a slower bilingual processing are posited. Lastly, implications for prosody teaching are drawn from these results.
- Published
- 2016
48. Perceived Effectiveness of Identified Methods and Techniques Teachers Adopt in Prose Literature Lessons in Some Secondary Schools in Owerri
- Author
-
Ezeokoli, F. O.
- Abstract
The study determined the methods adopted by teachers in prose literature-in-English classrooms, activities of teachers and students, teachers' perceived effectiveness of techniques used. It also examined the objectives of teaching prose literature that teachers should address and the extent teachers believe in student-identified difficulties of studying prose literature. The study adopted the descriptive survey research design. Purposive sampling technique was used to select 85 schools in Owerri metropolis and in each school, all literature teachers of senior secondary I and II were involved. In all, 246 literature teachers participated out of which 15 were purposively selected for observation. The two instruments were: Teachers' Questionnaire (r = 0.87) and Classroom Observation Schedule (r = 0.73). Data were analysed using frequency counts and percentages. Results revealed that teachers adopted lecture (28.4%), reading (10.9%) and discussion (7.3%) methods. Teacher's activities during the lesson include: giving background information, summarizing, dictating notes, reading aloud and explaining and asking questions. The adopted techniques include: questioning, oral reading, silent reading and discussion. Teachers' perceived questioning as the most effective technique followed by debating and summarizing. Teachers identified development of students' critical faculties and analytical skills, literary appreciation and language skills to be of utmost concern. It was concluded that the methods adopted by teachers are not diverse enough to cater for the needs and backgrounds of students.
- Published
- 2016
49. Dialogic Reading Aloud to Promote Extensive Reading
- Author
-
Jacobs, George M.
- Abstract
How can teachers motivate students to read extensively in a second language? One strategy is for teachers to read aloud to students to promote the joys of reading generally, to build students' language skills and to introduce students to specific authors, book series, genres, websites, etc. This article begins by discussing why teachers might want to read aloud to their students. Next, guidelines are given for reading aloud. These guidelines include insights from the literature on dialogic reading (Whitehurst, Arnold, Epstein, Angell, Smith, & Fischel, 1994). [This article was published in "Extensive Reading in Japan," v9 n1 p10-13 Jun 2016.]
- Published
- 2016
50. Automatization and Orthographic Development in Second Language Visual Word Recognition
- Author
-
Kida, Shusaku
- Abstract
The present study investigated second language (L2) learners' acquisition of automatic word recognition and the development of L2 orthographic representation in the mental lexicon. Participants in the study were Japanese university students enrolled in a compulsory course involving a weekly 30-minute sustained silent reading (SSR) activity with graded readers for 12 weeks. They completed the masked form-priming lexical decision task (LDT) before and after the in-class SSR activity. Results showed that participants exhibited signs of increasing automaticity of L2 word recognition (analyzed with the coefficient of variation), but could not develop their L2 orthographic representation (analyzed with the pattern of priming effects in the masked form-priming LDT). These findings suggest that automatization does not necessarily entail the development of orthographic representation, that is, the acquisition of automatic word recognition and the development of orthographic representation do not occur simultaneously. Instead, their development is asymmetrical.
- Published
- 2016
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.