Deaf College Students' Reading Comprehension and Strategy Use
Two comprehension studies were conducted with 46 deaf college students. In the first, 20 deaf college students representing higher and lower reading-ability levels were tested for correctly stating the main idea of a passage, answering content questions, indicating their understanding of the words a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American annals of the deaf (Washington, D.C. 1886) D.C. 1886), 2001-12, Vol.146 (5), p.385-400 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Two comprehension studies were conducted with 46 deaf college students. In the first, 20 deaf college students representing higher and lower reading-ability levels were tested for correctly stating the main idea of a passage, answering content questions, indicating their understanding of the words and phrases, and recognizing a topically incongruent sentence embedded in the passage. The results suggest that deaf students profess a better understanding of what they read than they are able to demonstrate. The students' inability to identify a topically incongruent sentence in the passage further suggests a need for them to more carefully and accurately evaluate their understanding of what they are reading. A second study investigated the effect of strategy review instruction on deaf college students' comprehension of short reading passages. Students reading at a higher level showed improved comprehension on the posttraining passage, but students reading at a lower level did not. Similarly, the control group of deaf students comparable to the higher-level readers did not show improved comprehension. |
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ISSN: | 0002-726X 1543-0375 1543-0375 |
DOI: | 10.1353/aad.2012.0206 |