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Look back at text or rely on memory? Efficacy of reading comprehension strategies in good and poor oral comprehenders
Author(s) -
Tobia Valentina,
Bonifacci Paola
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of research in reading
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.077
H-Index - 51
eISSN - 1467-9817
pISSN - 0141-0423
DOI - 10.1111/1467-9817.12328
Subject(s) - reading comprehension , comprehension , psychology , narrative , reading (process) , preference , cognitive psychology , developmental psychology , linguistics , statistics , philosophy , mathematics
Background Reading comprehension is a multifactorial process, but one of its features has been relatively under‐investigated: it is the strategy used when answering reading comprehension questions. In order to find the correct answer, children can either respond to questions about a text relying on their text memory or look back at the written text. This study analyses (i) which strategy, memory or look‐back is more frequently adopted in primary school children according to grade level and type of text (expository vs narrative) and (ii) the preferred (most frequently used) and more efficient (higher number of correct responses) strategy for poor oral comprehenders. Poor oral comprehenders were selected for having adequate nonword decoding skills but impaired oral comprehension, compared with good oral comprehenders. Methods The total sample comprised 1,417 primary school children. A standardised test assessing reading and comprehension of oral and written language was administered. Results In the comparison among children attending different grades, older children showed a more frequent use of the look‐back strategy for the expository text, whereas no age‐related difference emerged for the narrative text. Poor oral comprehenders ( n = 88) showed a different pattern, compared with matched good oral comprehenders ( n = 88), for both preference and efficiency of strategies. Despite having a globally poorer performance in reading comprehension, poor oral comprehenders were more accurate than good oral comprehenders when using the look‐back strategy. Conclusions The complex pattern of results obtained reinforces the idea that intervention strategies should be personalised based on individual characteristics and specific for the type of task and text.