Abstract :
The aim of this quasi-experimental study was to investigate the impact of a
metacognitive training program on university freshmen’s reading comprehension
skill in a three-credit General English (GE) Course. The participants included eight
groups of freshmen, in four disciplines: Management, Psychology, Mechanical
Engineering and Computer Engineering. They were randomly assigned as four
experimental and four control groups, each including approximately 30 participants.
The same materials were taught to all groups after their initial homogeneity in
English was assessed via Analysis of Variance of the pre-test scores obtained from a
Key English Test (KET). In the experimental groups, one whole session was devoted
to explicitly teaching three sets of metacognitive strategies and five reading
strategies: skimming, scanning, previewing, using context clues, and making
inferences. These groups also received metacognitive awareness-raising while
applying the strategies in each reading lesson for six sessions. The analyses of the
research data revealed that metacognitive strategy training promoted the participants’
learning when integrated with a reading-focused GE course regardless of their gender
and a small effect from discipline. The findings have implications for teachers,
materials developers, and teacher trainers.
Keywords :
metacognitive strategy training , reading comprehension , gender , discipline