Author/Authors :
Shirley Grimshaw، نويسنده , , Naomi Dungworth، نويسنده , , Cliff McKnight
and Anne Morris، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
This study investigates the differences in children’s comprehension and
enjoyment of storybooks according to the medium of presentation. Two
different storybooks were used and 132 children participated. Of these, 51
children read an extract from
The Magicians of Caprona
, about half reading an
electronic version with an online dictionary, and the rest reading a printed
version with a separate printed dictionary. The remaining 81 children read an
extract from
The Little Prince
, 26 reading an electronic version, 26 reading the
same but with narration and 29 reading a printed version. No dictionary was
supplied with this storybook. The type of medium did not significantly affect
the children’s enjoyment of either storybook, and while it took them longer to
read the electronic versions, this difference was only significant for
The Little
Prince
. For both storybooks, comprehension scores were higher for retrievaltype
questions than for inference ones. The use of the online dictionary in the
electronic condition of
The Magicians of Caprona
was significantly greater than
that for the printed dictionary in that condition. The provision of narration
in the electronic version of
The Little Prince
led to significantly higher
comprehension scores than when narration was absent.