Title: Reading Technology In An Adult Aboriginal Population
1Reading Technology In An Adult Aboriginal
Population Does One Size Fit All?
- Northern Ontario Assessment and Resource Centre
- Alana Holmes, Ph.D., C.Psych
- Robert Silvestri M.Ed., Ph.D. candidate
2Project Funding
- Aboriginal Education Office in association with
- Ministry of Education
- Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universities
3Rationale for Study
- Canadian Institutes of Health Report Literacy
and Health in Canada Aboriginal peoples in
Canada have lower reading literacy scores than
non-Aboriginal Canadians - 1988 needs survey by MChigeeng First Nation
critical to establish a community based literacy
program due to high rate of residents without a
high school diploma
4Rationale for Study
- Elkind, Black, and Murray (1996) in a study of
adults with reading disabilities demonstrated
enhanced performance in reading speed and reading
endurance when using text reading software as
compared to reading unaided. - Higgins and Raskind (1997) in a study of
post-secondary students with dyslexia found that
disabled readers improved reading comprehension
scores when utilizing text reading software.
5Methodological Shortcomings
- An exhaustive literature search revealed that
there is a dearth of studies investigating the
effects of text reading software on reading
skills in Aboriginal populations.
6Research Questions
- Examine the efficacy of text-to-voice technology
on reading comprehension performance in an
Aboriginal population with self-reported reading
difficulties. - Identify the cognitive correlates associated with
improved reading comprehension utilizing reading
technology for an Aboriginal population with
self-reported reading difficulties.
7Research Sample
- 38 Aboriginal participants with self-identified
reading difficulties - Wikwemikong First Nation n 31, MChigeeng First
Nation (West Bay) n 7 - Mean age 30.05 years (SD 12.02)
- Mean grade level completed 10.66 (SD 1.83)
- Sex Ratio 22 males, 16 females
8Procedures
- Each participant completed a variety of cognitive
and reading assessments. - Participants received a training session using
assistive reading technology (proficiency with
software controlled) - Counterbalanced format all participants
completed reading comprehension pre and post
testing with and without the use of assistive
technology.
9Measurements
- Questionnaires
- Adult Reading History Questionnaire Revised
(Parrila, Corkett, Kirby, Hein, 2003). - Author Recognition Test (West, Stanovich,
Mitchell, 1993). - Computer Attitude Questionnaire (Knezek
Miyashita, 1993).
10Adult Reading History Questionnaire Revised
(ARHQ-R)
11Author Recognition Test
- Abbreviated Author Recognition Test
-
- Instructions Below you will see a list of 25
names. Some of the people in the list are popular
writers (of books, magazine articles, and/or
newspaper columns) and some are not. Please read
the names and circle those individuals who you
know to be writers. Do not guess, only circle
those who you know are authors. -
-
- Isaac Asimov
Robert Tierney -
- Isabel Beck
J.R.R. Tolkien -
- P.E. Bryant
Richard Venezky -
- Barbara Cartland
Irving Wallace -
- James Clavell
Joseph Wambaugh -
- Gerald Duffy
Bob Woodward -
- Ian Fleming
-
12Computer Attitude Questionnaire
13Measurements
- Cognitive Measures
- WAIS-3 (all subtests except Object Assembly)
- TOWRE Phonemic Decoding and Sight Word
Efficiency - C-TOPP core subtests
- WIAT word reading, reading comprehension, and
pseudoword decoding - Nelson Denny Reading Comprehension Test Form G
and H comprehension tests
14Research Findings
- Self perception of reading history difficulty in
elementary and secondary school accurately
discriminated performance on standardized
measures of reading
15Table 5. Adult Reading History Questionnaire -
Revised Secondary School Groups and Reading
Measures Standard Scores
Phonological Processing Phonological Processing Phonological Processing Word Recognition Word Recognition
ARHQ-R Secondary School Groups C-TOPP Phonological Awareness Composite WIAT Pseudoword Decoding TOWRE Phonemic Decoding Efficiency WIAT Word Reading TOWRE Sight Word Efficiency
Less Problematic Reading History 106 104 95 100 93
Significant Reading History Difficulties 82 84 84 82 84
Very Significant Reading History Difficulties 73 73 66 64 67
Note ARHQ-R Adult Reading History
Questionnaire Revised C-TOPP Comprehensive
Test of Phonological Processing WIAT Wechsler
Individual Achievement Test TOWRE Test of Word
Reading Efficiency significant at the 0.01
level (two-tailed) significant at the 0.05
level (two-tailed)
16Table 5. Adult Reading History Questionnaire -
Revised Secondary School Groups and Reading
Measures Standard Scores
Rapid Naming Phonological Memory Reading Comprehension
ARHQ-R Secondary School Groups C-TOPP Rapid Naming Composite (n.s.) C-TOPP Phonological Memory Composite Nelson Denny Reading Comprehension Percentile
Less Problematic Reading History 106 97 54th
Significant Reading History Difficulties 91 88 36th
Very Significant Reading History Difficulties 97 70 25th
Note ARHQ-R Adult Reading History
Questionnaire Revised C-TOPP Comprehensive
Test of Phonological Processing WIAT Wechsler
Individual Achievement Test TOWRE Test of Word
Reading Efficiency significant at the 0.01
level (two-tailed) significant at the 0.05
level (two-tailed) n.s. non-significant
17Research Findings
- Overall, participants provided more correct
answers and attempted more questions on the
comprehension component of the ND when reading
without assistive technology number of incorrect
answers remained constant when reading with and
without assistive technology - confounds lack of computer experience ,
computer anxiety, reading exposure (ART),
automaticity concerns ( e.g., processing speed). - significant at the 0.01 level (two-tailed)
0.05 level (two-tailed) - ND Comprehension Correct Answers
- M 13.97 without technology vs. M 10.58 with
technology p lt.01 - ND Comprehension Attempts
- M 22.47 without technology vs. M 18.97 with
technology p.lt01
18Research Findings
- 3. Students with a given set of cognitive
characteristics, poor performance on non-word
repetition and rapid naming tasks, demonstrated
improvements in comprehension on the Nelson Denny
when using assistive technology
19Nonword Repetition groups and Nelson Denny
Comprehension Performance
Low Group (below the mean) High Group (above the mean)
Answered more questions correctly with technology (M 7.25 with technology vs. M 4.25 without technology p lt.01 Answered more questions correctly without technology (M 9.00 with technology vs. M 14.57 without technology p lt .01
Attempted more questions with technology (M 18.00 attempts with technology vs. M 12.00 without technology p .13) Attempted more questions without technology (M 16.43 with technology vs. M 23.57 without technology p .02)
Higher reading comprehension percentile with technology (M 9th with technology vs. M 2nd without technology p .01 Higher reading comprehension percentile without technology (M 17th with technology vs. M 38th without technology p lt.01
20Regression Analysis of Correct Answers on Nelson
Denny Comprehension Test utilizing Assistive
Technology
Predictors Significance Zero Order Correlation Partial Correlation
Verbal Comprehension Index .05 .57 .35
Working Memory Index .01 .53 .44
CTOPP Memory for Digits .01 .51 .51
CTOPP Blending Words .01 -.06 -.71
TOWRE Sight Word .08 .61 .32
Multiple Correlation Coefficient .86
21Regression Analysis of CTOPP Nonword Repetition
Performance
Predictor Significance Zero Order Correlation Partial Correlation
Verbal Comprehension Index .01 .53 .45
Processing Speed Index .01 -.19 -.52
CTOP Phoneme Elision .01 .24 -.46
CTOPP Blending Words .02 .42 .43
WIAT Pseudoword .01 .56 .51
Multiple Correlation Coefficient . 79
22Significance of Nonword Repetition to Reading
Comprehension utilizing AT
- Assesses many of the underlying skills associated
with utilizing assistive technology for reading
comprehension. - Sound Perception acoustic quality and
phonotactic frequency (Coady et al., 2005, 2007) - Phonological Awareness and Processing
processing of phonemes (Bowery, 1996) - Phonological Memory the ability the store
phonological units (i.e., phonemes) associated
with depth of vocabulary (verbal comprehension)
23Cognitive Load Theory (Sweller, 1999) and Nonword
Repetition Performance
Poor NWR performance
Good NWR performance
Deficits in processing mechanisms underlying NWR
Have prerequisite NWR skills
Congruent with AT instructional format
Incongruent with AT instructional format
AT - Highly structured, word-by-word reading
format
Intrinsic processing instructional format
germane cognitive load (reading comp. gains)
Intrinsic processing instructional format
high cognitive load (expertise reversal effect)
24Applications/Future Research
- ARHQ-R predicted general reading difficulties in
the sampled population it holds merit as a
screening tool to discern reading problems in
Aboriginal adults. - Examining students phonological processing
profiles prior to assigning reading technology
may be a useful practice if similar results are
found in a larger research sample. - Future studies follow-up study with participants
utilizing technology for a longer period of time.
25Contact Information
- Alana Holmes, Ph.D., C.Psych. (705) 524-7397
alana.holmes_at_cambriancollege.ca - Robert Silvestri, M.Ed., Ph.D., candidate - (705)
524-7397 robert.silvestri_at_cambriancollege.ca
26Research Disclaimer
- The results obtained in this study are
preliminary as they were obtained with a small
number of research participants. These results
need to be replicated with larger, heterogeneous
groups before implementation into disability
services or clinical practice.