TY - JOUR
T1 - Improving Native American children's listening comprehension through concrete representations
AU - Marley, Scott
AU - Levin, Joel R.
AU - Glenberg, Arthur
N1 - Funding Information:
This study is part of the first author’s doctoral research in the Department of Educational Psychology at the University of Arizona, under the supervision of the second author. We are grateful to Jerome D’Agostino and Elizabeth Glisky for their helpful input as members of the dissertation committee. We also thank Gabriella Theodosiou for assistance in scoring the data and Richard Morris for providing partial funding of the study through a Meyerson Disability Research Project predoctoral grant to Scott Marley. Additional support was received from the Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education, through Grant R305H030266 to Arthur Glenberg and Joel Levin. The opinions expressed here are those of the authors and do not represent views of the Institute or the U.S. Department of Education. Thanks are also due to two anonymous reviewers of this journal for their constructive comments on an earlier draft of the manuscript. A preliminary version of this paper was presented at the 2005 annual meeting of the American Educational Research Association in Montreal.
PY - 2007/7
Y1 - 2007/7
N2 - The primary purpose of the present study was to determine whether recent findings documenting the benefits of text-related motor activity on young children's memory for reading passages [Glenberg, A. M., Gutierrez, T., Levin, J. R., Japuntich, S., & Kaschak, M. (2004). Activity and imagined activity can enhance young readers' reading comprehension. Journal of Educational Psychology, 96, 424-436.] could be extended to the text processing of Native American children. Forty-five third through seventh-grade students with academic learning difficulties listened to four narrative passages under one of three instructional conditions: manipulate, where students moved toy objects to represent the story's content; visual, where students observed the results of an experimenter's toy manipulations; and free-study, where students thought about the content of the presented story sentences. Findings were consistent with the literature documenting the comprehension and memory benefits of text-relevant concrete representations, with students in the manipulate and visual conditions statistically outrecalling students in the free-study condition. In contrast to the results of the Glenberg et al. (2004) reading study, no conditions-related differences were observed on a final passage where students were instructed to generate internal visual images of story events in the absence of external visual support (i.e., when no toys were present).
AB - The primary purpose of the present study was to determine whether recent findings documenting the benefits of text-related motor activity on young children's memory for reading passages [Glenberg, A. M., Gutierrez, T., Levin, J. R., Japuntich, S., & Kaschak, M. (2004). Activity and imagined activity can enhance young readers' reading comprehension. Journal of Educational Psychology, 96, 424-436.] could be extended to the text processing of Native American children. Forty-five third through seventh-grade students with academic learning difficulties listened to four narrative passages under one of three instructional conditions: manipulate, where students moved toy objects to represent the story's content; visual, where students observed the results of an experimenter's toy manipulations; and free-study, where students thought about the content of the presented story sentences. Findings were consistent with the literature documenting the comprehension and memory benefits of text-relevant concrete representations, with students in the manipulate and visual conditions statistically outrecalling students in the free-study condition. In contrast to the results of the Glenberg et al. (2004) reading study, no conditions-related differences were observed on a final passage where students were instructed to generate internal visual images of story events in the absence of external visual support (i.e., when no toys were present).
KW - Embodiment theory
KW - Indexical hypothesis
KW - Listening comprehension
KW - Native American students
KW - Text-processing strategies
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U2 - 10.1016/j.cedpsych.2007.03.003
DO - 10.1016/j.cedpsych.2007.03.003
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:34249739673
SN - 0361-476X
VL - 32
SP - 537
EP - 550
JO - Contemporary Educational Psychology
JF - Contemporary Educational Psychology
IS - 3
ER -