Title of article
What Cognitive Benefits Does an Activity-Based Reading Strategy Afford Young Native American Readers?
Author/Authors
Scott C. Marley، نويسنده , , Joel R. Levin & Arthur M. Glenberg ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
23
From page
395
To page
417
Abstract
The authors conducted 2 experiments with children from a reservation community. In Experiment 1, 45 third-grade children were randomly assigned to the following reading strategies: (a) “reread,” in which participants read each sentence of a story and then reread it; (b) “observe,” in which participants read sentences and then observed an experimenter move manipulatives as directed by the story; and (c) “activity,” in which participants read sentences and then moved manipulatives as directed by the story. In Experiment 2, 40 second-grade children were randomly assigned to either the reread or activity strategy. In both experiments, activity participants remembered more story content than did reread participants. In Experiment 1, the authors identified no memory differences between observe and activity strategies. When imagery instructions replaced the original strategies, Experiment 1 third-grade activity (and observe) participants recalled more story content than did reread participants, but Experiment 2 second-grade activity participants did not. The authors discuss the instructional benefits of activity-based reading strategies, along with developmental implications.
Keywords
strategy , embodiment , imagery , Native American , activity , reading
Journal title
The Journal of Experimental Education
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
The Journal of Experimental Education
Record number
708779
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