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Process-oriented assessment tools for studying second graders' informational comprehensionHilden, Katherine R. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Michigan State University. Dept. of Counseling, Educational Psychology, and Special Education, 2008. / Title from PDF t.p. (Proquest, viewed on Aug. 17, 2009) Includes bibliographical references.
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Validation of clozure measures of reading comprehensionArocha, José Francisco January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
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Subgroups of working memory deficits and reading comprehension.Irons, Diane 19 May 2011 (has links)
Rationale : Investigating the relationship between working memory and reading
comprehension will lead to an improved understanding of the nature of working memory
and will reveal how working memory contributes to reading comprehension failure. A
pattern of working memory deficits will determine if ‘signature’ working memory profiles
exist which will assist in the diagnosis and treatment of children with reading
comprehension difficulties.
Aims : (1) To explore the relationship between working memory and reading
comprehension to determine if there are ‘signature’ working memory profiles that
distinguish subgroups of Grade 5 English language learners with different comprehension
capabilities. (2) To determine if a domain-specific or general working memory system is
implicated in reading comprehension. (3) To explore the particular role played by the
episodic buffer zone in reading comprehension.
Method : Eighty Grade 5 English learners were tested on the GORT-4, AWMA and CELF-
4 Recalling Sentences Subtest. Based on their accuracy/decoding and comprehension
scores on the GORT-4, participants were assigned to one of four reading ability groups:
Skilled Reader Group; Reading Disabled Group; Poor Comprehender Group; or Poor
Fluency Group. Comparison of mean standard scores determined how the four reading
ability groups fared on the five memory components. Correlation and regression methods
investigated the relationships between the five working memory variables and reading
comprehension across the four reading ability groups.
Results : Working memory plays a role in reading comprehension. The Skilled Reader
group displayed intact working memory profiles, whilst the Reading Disabled group
performed in the low average range on four working memory variables and below average
on the fifth viz. sentence recall. The Poor Comprehender group’s working memory
performance resembled that of the Skilled Reader group on two working memory
variables. The Poor Fluency group performed below average on visuo-spatial short-term
memory. These findings gave evidence of the inter-play between domain-specific and
domain-general components of working memory during the complex task of reading
comprehension. In addition, the findings highlighted the predictive role of sentence recall,
as well as that of verbal working memory in reading comprehension. The episodic buffer
was shown to play an important binding function between fluid and crystallised knowledge.
The results suggested that reading comprehension was affected by a learner’s working
memory capacity, however, working memory alone did not account for variations in
performance. Lower-order and higher-order cognitive processes, as well as the interaction
between fluid and crystallised knowledge appear essential to authentic reading. This has
ramifications for prevention and remediation of reading comprehension deficits and
underscores the important role of the speech therapist in literacy promotion.
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The relationship between speed and accuracy of comprehension in teaching readingAl-Dahiry, Saleem A January 2010 (has links)
Typescript, etc. / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
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The relationship between oral reading fluency and comprehensionTalada, Jessica A. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (D.Min.)--Liberty Theological Seminary and Graduate School, 2007.
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The Effects of Participation in Literature Circles on Reading ComprehensionMarshall, Jodi Crum 06 June 2006 (has links)
Research supports that comprehension is a vital component of reading and life-long literacy, and there are many instructional approaches for teaching reading comprehension. Literature circles are a popular approach which are widely used but have not yet been studied empirically. The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of participation in literature circles on the reading comprehension of middle school students. More specifically, the study examined whether there was a difference in the reading comprehension scores of students after participating in literature circles versus after participating in directed reading activity, and whether there were interactions of type of instruction and students' overall reading achievement levels. A mixed design using split-plot ANOVA was used to examine the within-subject variable of treatment, and the between-subject variables of class period, assessments (or passages used), and overall reading achievement levels, as well as determine interactions among the variables. Eighty six eighth-grade students (65% male, 35%female) in a suburban public middle school in the southeastern United States participated in the eight-week study. By class period, students were randomly placed in literature circle groups for four weeks and also participated in whole-class directed reading activity for four weeks. Students read one short story each week and comprehension was assessed with corresponding cloze passages. The reading scores indicated there were no significant differences between the two types of instruction. However, results were statistically significant for all interactions (treatment and passages, treatment and class period, and treatment and overall reading achievement). In addition, when the data were analyzed by overall reading ability it can be argued that the findings have practical significance. Evidence suggests that students with low overall reading achievement levels may not respond to literature circles as positively as other students, and that students with high overall reading achievement may respond more favorably. Overall, literature circles appear to have promise as an instructional approach to reading, especially for non-struggling readers. The discussion expands on the limitations of this study as well as focuses on the need for further scientifically-based research on this popular reading approach.
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An investigation of relationships between oral reading rate and reading comprehensionRimkus, Karen F. January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.Ed.)--Regis University, Denver, Colo., 2006. / Title from PDF title page (viewed on Feb. 14, 2007). Includes bibliographical references.
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Using Music to Increase Reading Comprehension in Children With AutismRosenfield, Betty 01 January 2013 (has links)
Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) exhibit deficits in reading comprehension. Previous research indicates that music increases attention span, as well as increases auditory discrimination, memory and verbal skills in children with ASD. This study attempts to increase the reading comprehension of three children with autism by implementing a musical modality approach to learning. To assess the effects of musical presentation on reading comprehension a multiple baseline design across children was used. In baseline each child was told to read a story silently to themselves and then answer standard reading comprehension recall questions (who, what, where, when). In treatment the children were presented stories read to them (speaking modality) or sung to them (singing modality) and again asked standard recall questions. Results found that all three participant’s reading comprehension scores increased in relation to baseline, and one out of three participants reading comprehension scores increased in the signing modality condition as compared to the baseline and speaking modality conditions.
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Differential effects of the conceptual level matching model in a structured versus unstructured reading comprehension task with a population of learning studentsSurber, James M. 03 June 2011 (has links)
The focus of this study was the testing of the Conceptual Level Matching Model with a population of learning disabled (LD) children. The students selected for use in this study consisted of an equal number of students in the high and low CL groups ranging between 13 and 15 years of age.The final sample included 35 males and five females whose IQ's ranged between 80 and 117. These students were attending public school special education LD resource rooms in Anderson, Indiana. The students, selected on the basis of their chronological age, were divided into two groups according to their score on the Paragraph Completion Test. Thus, comparisons were observed among and between the two experimental groups. A statistical analysis of those attributes on which the students were grouped revealed no significant differences between groups on measures of chronological age, full scale IQ and reading comprehension scores.The results were generated from the administration of the Paragraph Completion Test (PCT) and the Analytical Reading Inventory (ARI). The PCT was used to assign students to either the high or low group who were in turn randomly assigned to either the structured or unstructured group to form the final four experimental groups. All students were then administered three graded paragraphs from the ARI; intended to measure their level of reading comprehension. T-tests were initially used to test for significant differences between the two groups in terms of chronological age, IQ, and reading comprehension scores. A two-way factorial analysis of variance was used to test differences between means for the four experimental groups. The hypothesis predicting a significant difference between the two main groups on the ARI was supported by the data. It was concluded that LD students high in conceptual level (CL) can be expected to perform significantly better than low CL students on a reading comprehension task.A significant difference was also shown between the low CL group taught in a highly structured fashion and the low CL group taught in an unstructured fashion; with the structured group performing significantly better. However, the third hypothesis which predicted that the high CL group taught in an unstructured fashion would perform better than the high CL group taught in a structured fashion was not supported by the data. In fact the results showed a trend in the opposite direction, with the high CL group-structured performing better than the high CL group-unstructured.The data also supported the hypothesis that the high CL group would perform significantly better on the cause and effect, inferential, and conclusion reading comprehension questions on the ARI than the low CL group. However, these results should be interpreted with caution because of the high level of overall significance between the high and low CL groups. Therefore, these results may not be a reflection of the type of question asked but of the overall superiority of the high CL group.Recommended avenues of investigation for future research is cited as follows: (a) replication of the study with equal numbers of females to permit greater generalization of the results; (b) evaluation of the CL of LD teachers to see if they prefer to teach in a highly structured fashion which is consistent with the way low CL students prefer to learn; (c) structuring an LD student's learning environment on a long term basis; (d) study of the environment that would allow LD students low in CL to move to the next higher stage of development; and (e) development of an instrument that can be used to measure the CL of younger children.
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The effects of Readers theatre on fluency and comprehension on fifth grade students in regular classrooms /Carrick, Lila Ubert, January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ed. D.)--Lehigh University, 2000. / Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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