Information and Communication Technology Profiles of College Students with Learning Disabilities and Adequate and Very Poor Readers
Author(s) -
Catherine S. Fichten,
Mai Nhu Nguyen,
Laura King,
Maria Barile,
Alice Havel,
Zohra Mimouni,
Alexandre Chauvin,
Jillian Budd,
Odette Raymond,
Jean-Charles Juhel,
Jennison V. Asuncion
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of education and learning
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1927-5269
pISSN - 1927-5250
DOI - 10.5539/jel.v2n1p176
Subject(s) - reading comprehension , psychology , icts , reading (process) , comprehension , test (biology) , learning disability , information and communications technology , mathematics education , pedagogy , medical education , developmental psychology , computer science , linguistics , medicine , programming language , paleontology , biology , philosophy , world wide web
We interviewed 58 experts (30 in French, 28 in English) about potentially useful information and communication technologies (ICTs) for Quebec college students with a learning disability (LD) and evaluated whether college students with an LD (n = 74), in fact, used these. We also compared ICT use, learning opportunities, and attitudes among three groups of students from Montreal area French and English language colleges: (1) students with an LD, and (2) students who, based on a reading comprehension test, were categorized as adequate readers (approximately top 50%) or (3) very poor readers (approximately bottom 20%). Results indicate important discrepancies between the views of the experts and the realities of students with LDs. Moreover, students with an LD use significantly fewer different types of ICTs than those without an LD.
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