Oral and silent reading in adolescents: evidence from Russian

Authors

  • Vladislav Zubov Institute for Cognitive Studies, St Petersburg University, Russia Author
  • Tatiana Petrova Institute for Cognitive Studies, St Petersburg University, Russia Author
  • Svetlana Alexeeva Institute for Cognitive Studies, St Petersburg University, Russia Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36505/ExLing-2021/12/0069/000542

Keywords:

reading aloud, silent reading, Russian, adolescences, eye-tracking

Abstract

This study aimed to answer two questions: what type of reading contributes to more successful text processing and understanding, and what are the main characteristics of silent and oral reading for Russian-speaking secondary school children. Results show that while reading orally, participants with reading disorders comprehend the text poorly. They have a limited amount of attentional resources available for any given cognitive tasks, and thus, the greater the amount of attention they paid to text processing, the less is available for text understanding. However, in silent reading, the same participants demonstrate good comprehension if they read slowly, i.e. make more fixations and regressions. Their cognitive resources are spent on text comprehension, which is eventually what reading is aimed at.

References

Adams, M.J. 1990. Beginning to Read: Thinking and Learning About Print. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

Fuchs, L.S., Fuchs, D., Hosp, M.K., Jenkins, J.R. 2001. Oral reading fluency as an indicator of reading competence: A theoretical, empirical, and historical analysis. Scientific Studies of Reading 5(3), 239-256.

Kim, Y.S., Wagner, R.K., Foster, E. 2011. Relations Among Oral Reading Fluency, Silent Reading Fluency, and Reading Comprehension: A Latent Variable Study of First-Grade Readers. Scientific Studies of Reading 15(4), 338-362.

Price, K.W., Meisinger, E.B., Louwerse, M.M., D’Mello, S. 2016. The contributions of oral and silent reading fluency to reading comprehension. Reading Psychology 37(2), 167-201.

Prior, S.M., Fenwick, K.D., Saunders, K.S., Ouellette, R., O'Quinn, C., Harvey, S. 2011. Comprehension after oral and silent reading: Does grade level matter? Literacy Research and Instruction 50(3), 183-194.

Schimmel, N., Ness, M. 2017. The effects of oral and silent reading on reading comprehension. Reading Psychology 38(4), 390-416.

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Published

01-01-2021

How to Cite

Oral and silent reading in adolescents: evidence from Russian. (2021). Linguistic Proceedings Series, 12(1), 273-276. https://doi.org/10.36505/ExLing-2021/12/0069/000542

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