Title: Reading Comprehension What makes text easy or difficult
1Reading ComprehensionWhat makes text easy or
difficult?
IDdagarna, Sollentunamässan, 3-5 October 2001
- Dr Chris Singleton
- Department of Psychology
- University of Hull, UK
- c.singleton_at_psy.hull.ac.uk
2Dyslexia
- Dyslexia is a specific language-based disorder
of constitutional origin characterised by
difficulties in single-word decoding, usually
reflecting insufficient phonological processing
abilities. These difficulties in single-word
decoding are often unexpected in relation to age
and other cognitive and academic abilities.
International Dyslexia Association, 1994
3Causal model of dyslexia
Genetic brain abnormality
BIOLOGICAL
Phonological deficit
Poor phoneme- grapheme conversion
Environment
COGNITIVE
Poor reading
Poor memory
Poor phonological awareness
BEHAVIOURAL
4Phonology and memory
- Phonological processes are the basis for the
development of a phonological decoding strategy
in reading. - Working memory is integral in that it enables
constituent sounds and/or phonological codes to
be held in short term store while phonological
coding processes are carried out.
5Visual memory
- Visual memory is especially important in early
stages of learning to read. - Poor readers show bias towards visual encoding of
words (rather than phonological encoding). - Children with good visual memory but poor
auditory memory find acquisition of phonics
difficult.
6Simple componential model of reading comprehension
Decoding ability
Readingcomprehension
Listeningcomprehension
7Which is more important?
- Decoding skill?
- This is the best predictor of reading
comprehension in younger children.
- Listening comprehension?
- This is the best predictor of reading
comprehension in older children and adults.
8Poor decoding skills
- Poor word recognition
- Very poor phonic skills
- Very poor ability to read non-words
- Difficulty with new or unfamiliar words
- Text reading slow and laborious
9The componential model of literacy difficulties
COMPREHENSION GOOD
Dyslexic readers
Normal readers
DECODING GOOD
DECODING POOR
POOR
Garden variety poor readers
Hyperlexic readers
COMPREHENSION POOR
10Routes to comprehension
Perceptionof text
Access to lexical store(word recognition)
Visual code
Assembly of wordsin working memory
Phonologicalcode
Pronunciationof text
Comprehensionof text
11Processes in comprehension
- Word recognition skills
- Vocabulary knowledge
- Syntactic knowledge
- World knowledge
- Lexical memory (long term)
- Working memory (short term)
- Inference
12Memory processes
Rehearsal
Long Term Memory
Sensory Memory
Working Memory
IN
(Short Term)
OUT
13Inference
- Inference is the process of drawing conclusions
from information when those conclusion are not
explicitly stated in the text. - Example
- The man sat down. The chair creaked under the
weight. - Inferences (1) the man sat on the chair (2)
the man is heavy.
14Inference Processes
- Integration of information from different parts
of the text e.g. Tom decided to lend Bill his
car. He was going to take up cycling. Which one
is going to take up cycling Tom or Bill? - Construction of meaning using other knowledge
e.g. Jill cut the bread. How did Jill cut the
bread? - Elaboration, e.g. Jill cut the ribbon. The
scissors were blunt. What did she use to cut the
ribbon?
15Psychological correlates of poor comprehending
- Problems with making inferences
- Working memory deficits
- Lexical processes not automatic
- Poor vocabulary
16Causes of reading comprehension difficulties
Lack of reading practice
Poor decodingskills
Visual discomfort
Readingcomprehension difficulties
Inadequatevocabulary
Dyslexia
Working memoryproblems
Poor generalknowledge
Poor inferentialskills
17Visual Discomfort
- The experience of unpleasant visual symptoms
(blurring of text, movement, colour) when
reading. - Probably 15-20 of population most common in
people who suffer from epilepsy, migraine and
dyslexia. - Due to striped (visual grating) effect of lines
of text on strongly contrasting background. - Various terms used ( scotopic sensitivity
syndrome Meares-Irlen syndrome pattern
glare visual discomfort). - Mears (1980), Irlen (1983), Wilkins (1995) found
that coloured filters and lenses can help some
dyslexics.
18Assessing comprehensionSome example tests
- Neale Analysis of Reading (6 - 13 years)
- WORD Reading Comprehension Test (6 - 16 years)
- LASS Junior and Secondary Sentence Reading Tests
(computerised 8 - 15 years) - Woodcock Reading Mastery Tests Passage
Comprehension (adults) - No tests ideally suitable for students at college
or university level.
19Adult reading comprehension The Craigforth
Factory Study
- Simmons, F.R. and Singleton, C.H. (2000) The
reading comprehension abilities of dyslexic
students in higher education. Dyslexia, 6,
178-192. - The performance of 15 dyslexic students in higher
education on a reading comprehension task was
compared with 15 non-dyslexic students. - The task was to read a 655-word text about the
modern-isation of a factory then to answer 10
multiple choice questions 5 literal questions
and 5 inferential questions. Students were
allowed to refer back to the text while answering
the questions.
20Average scores for the dyslexic and non-dyslexic
students.
21Average times for reading the text and answering
the questions
22Summary of results
- Dyslexic students took longer to read the text
and to answer the questions. - Dyslexic and non-dyslexic students did not differ
in ability to answer the literal comprehension
questions. - Dyslexic students were significantly poorer in
ability to answer the inferential comprehension
questions. - Dyslexic students were significantly poorer on
the index of their specific ability to make
inferences. - Dyslexic students are specifically impaired in
constructing inferences when reading complex
text.
23Conclusions
- Dyslexic students are specifically impaired in
constructing inferences when reading complex
text. - The text and questions did not include unusual or
long words. Both groups could answer the literal
questions well. It is unlikely that the
dyslexics difficulty with inferential questions
is directly related to inability to decode the
text. - Dyslexic students can have reading comprehension
difficulties that cannot be accounted for by an
inability to decode individual words in the text. - Do we now have to change our definition of
dyslexia?
24Why did dyslexics find inferential questions more
difficult?
- 1. Lack of automaticity in single word decoding?
- If the dyslexic subjects could decode the words,
but had to assign more conscious effort to the
task then they would have less cognitive
workspace to devote to comprehension task, e.g.
integrating information from various parts of the
text using information from long-term memory to
interpret words in context. - 2. Poor short-term (working) memory?
- If working memory processes are weak, the
dyslexics would be likely to loose information
before the relevant inferences could be drawn.
25Improving and supporting reading comprehension
- Inference training
- Text structure training
- Imagery training
- Metacognitive training (e.g. questions, key
words, key sentences) - Patterned note-taking (e.g. mind mapping)
- Multisensory support (e.g. text-to-speech)
26Ways of improving text
- use clear and short sentences
- use bullet points with keywords and phrases
- clear, legible font, slightly larger than usual
- put key words in bold but avoid italics
- use some colour but not too much
- do not use right justification of text
- use images that support the text
- break up the page into short paragraphs
- avoid strong visual grating effects
- make information explicit - avoid inferences