BibTex RIS Cite
Year 2017, Volume: 5 Issue: 9, 74 - 83, 13.05.2017

Abstract

References

  • Allington, R.L. (1983). Fluency: The Neglected Reading Goal. The reading Teacher, Vol. 36, No. 6, pp.556-561.
  • Dowhower, S.L. (1987). Effects of Repeated Reading on Second-Grade Transitional Readers' Fluency and Comprehension. Reading Research Quarterly, Vol. 22, No. 4, pp. 389-406.
  • Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development(2013).http://www.nichd.nih.gov/research/supported/Pages/nrp.a spx/
  • Fielding, L. G., & Pearson, P. D. (1994). Synthesis of Research Reading Comprehension. What works. Educational Leadership, Vol.51, pp.62-62.
  • Gorsuch, G., Taguchi, E. (2010). Developing Reading Fluency and Comprehension Using Repeated Reading: Evidence From Longitudinal Student Reports. Language Teaching Research, Vol. 14 (1), pp.27-59.
  • Grabe, W. (2009). Reading in a second language: Moving from theory to practice. Cambridge University Press: USA
  • Kuhn M. R., Schwanenflugel P. J., Meisinger E. B., Levyand Timothy B. A., Rasinski V. (2010). Aligning Theory and Assessment of Reading Fluency: Automaticity, Prosody, and Definitions of Fluency. Reading Research Quarterly, Vol. 45, No. 2, pp. 230-251.
  • Levy, B.A. (2001). Moving the bottom: Improving reading fluency. In M. Wolf (Ed.), Dyslexia, fluency, and the brain (pp. 357-379). Timonium, MD: York.
  • Rasinski,T.V. (1990). Effects of Repeated Reading and Listening-while- Reading on Reading Fluency. Journal of Educational Research, Vol.83, 3, pp.147-150.
  • Raygor, A. L. (1977). The Raygor Readability Estimate: A Quick and Easy Way to Determine Difficulty. Reading: Theory, Research, and Practice, pp. 259- 263.
  • Reitsma, P. (1988). Reading Practice for Beginners: Effects of Guided Reading, Reading-While-Listening, and Independent Reading with Computer-Based Speech Feedback. Reading Research Quarterly, Vol. 23, No. 2, pp. 219-235.
  • Shany, B.T., Biemiller, A. (1995). Assisted Reading Practice: Effects on Performance for Poor Readers in Grades 3 and 4. Reading Research Quarterly, Vol. 30 (3). pp. 382-395.
  • Snow, C.,& Sweet, A. (2003). Reading for Comprehension. In A. Sweet & C. Snow (Eds.), Rethinking Reading Comprehension (p.1-11). New York: Guilford.
  • Taguchi, E. (1997). The Effects of Repeated Readings on the Development of Lower Identification Skills of FL Readers. Reading in a Foreign Language,11 (1), pp.97-119.
  • Taguchi, E., Gorsuch, G. (2002). Transfer Effects of Repeated EFL Reading on Reading New Passages: A Preliminary Investigation. Reading in a Foreign Language, Vol.14 (1), pp.43-65.
  • Taguchi, E., Gorsuch, G., Maass, M.T. & Snipp, K. (2012). Assisted Repeated Reading with an Advanced-Level Japanese EFL Reader: A Longitudinal Diary Study. Reading in a Foreign Language, Vol.24 (1), pp.30-55.

THE POSSIBLE EFFECTS OF COMBINED READING ACTIVITIES ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF SILENT READING RATE

Year 2017, Volume: 5 Issue: 9, 74 - 83, 13.05.2017

Abstract

This study aims to find the effects of assisted and unassisted repeated reading activities (combined reading activities) on the development of beginner and pre-intermediate adult L2 learners’ reading fluency and find out which proficiency level benefits more from the combined reading activities. The participants of the study are 16 beginner and 19 pre-intermediate L2 university learners. Sixteen reading passages (eight for beginner level and eight for pre-intermediate) were chosen for the study. The sessions lasted five weeks. The participants first read the text and recorded their time (unassisted reading). Then the passage was read along with the audiotape for the second, third, and fourth times (assisted reading). The participants read the text three times more and the last reading was again recorded (unassisted reading). The first and the last readings were used as pre and post-tests. The findings suggest that both groups developed their reading rate while pre-intermediate group benefited more from the treatment.

Keywords: reading rate, assisted reading activities, unassisted reading activities, proficiency level

References

  • Allington, R.L. (1983). Fluency: The Neglected Reading Goal. The reading Teacher, Vol. 36, No. 6, pp.556-561.
  • Dowhower, S.L. (1987). Effects of Repeated Reading on Second-Grade Transitional Readers' Fluency and Comprehension. Reading Research Quarterly, Vol. 22, No. 4, pp. 389-406.
  • Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development(2013).http://www.nichd.nih.gov/research/supported/Pages/nrp.a spx/
  • Fielding, L. G., & Pearson, P. D. (1994). Synthesis of Research Reading Comprehension. What works. Educational Leadership, Vol.51, pp.62-62.
  • Gorsuch, G., Taguchi, E. (2010). Developing Reading Fluency and Comprehension Using Repeated Reading: Evidence From Longitudinal Student Reports. Language Teaching Research, Vol. 14 (1), pp.27-59.
  • Grabe, W. (2009). Reading in a second language: Moving from theory to practice. Cambridge University Press: USA
  • Kuhn M. R., Schwanenflugel P. J., Meisinger E. B., Levyand Timothy B. A., Rasinski V. (2010). Aligning Theory and Assessment of Reading Fluency: Automaticity, Prosody, and Definitions of Fluency. Reading Research Quarterly, Vol. 45, No. 2, pp. 230-251.
  • Levy, B.A. (2001). Moving the bottom: Improving reading fluency. In M. Wolf (Ed.), Dyslexia, fluency, and the brain (pp. 357-379). Timonium, MD: York.
  • Rasinski,T.V. (1990). Effects of Repeated Reading and Listening-while- Reading on Reading Fluency. Journal of Educational Research, Vol.83, 3, pp.147-150.
  • Raygor, A. L. (1977). The Raygor Readability Estimate: A Quick and Easy Way to Determine Difficulty. Reading: Theory, Research, and Practice, pp. 259- 263.
  • Reitsma, P. (1988). Reading Practice for Beginners: Effects of Guided Reading, Reading-While-Listening, and Independent Reading with Computer-Based Speech Feedback. Reading Research Quarterly, Vol. 23, No. 2, pp. 219-235.
  • Shany, B.T., Biemiller, A. (1995). Assisted Reading Practice: Effects on Performance for Poor Readers in Grades 3 and 4. Reading Research Quarterly, Vol. 30 (3). pp. 382-395.
  • Snow, C.,& Sweet, A. (2003). Reading for Comprehension. In A. Sweet & C. Snow (Eds.), Rethinking Reading Comprehension (p.1-11). New York: Guilford.
  • Taguchi, E. (1997). The Effects of Repeated Readings on the Development of Lower Identification Skills of FL Readers. Reading in a Foreign Language,11 (1), pp.97-119.
  • Taguchi, E., Gorsuch, G. (2002). Transfer Effects of Repeated EFL Reading on Reading New Passages: A Preliminary Investigation. Reading in a Foreign Language, Vol.14 (1), pp.43-65.
  • Taguchi, E., Gorsuch, G., Maass, M.T. & Snipp, K. (2012). Assisted Repeated Reading with an Advanced-Level Japanese EFL Reader: A Longitudinal Diary Study. Reading in a Foreign Language, Vol.24 (1), pp.30-55.
There are 16 citations in total.

Details

Journal Section Research Article
Authors

Pınar Uyanıker

Publication Date May 13, 2017
Submission Date November 8, 2016
Published in Issue Year 2017 Volume: 5 Issue: 9

Cite

APA Uyanıker, P. (2017). THE POSSIBLE EFFECTS OF COMBINED READING ACTIVITIES ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF SILENT READING RATE. Journal of Computer and Education Research, 5(9), 74-83.

download13894               13896   13897 14842      


Creative Commons License


This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.


Dear Authors;

We would like to inform you that ORCID, which includes 16 digit number will be requested from the authors for the studies to be published in JCER. It is important to be sensitive on this issue. 


Best regards...