Deconstructing the benefits of reading‐while‐listening on L2 reading comprehension: The influence of cross‐orthographic distance

Reading‐while‐listening (RWL) has been suggested to facilitate reading comprehension by establishing letter‐to‐sound correspondences in the word recognition process. However, previous findings are inconsistent regarding the effect of RWL on foreign language (L2) reading comprehension. To understand...

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Published inForeign language annals Vol. 57; no. 1; pp. 163 - 183
Main Author Koh, Joanne
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Alexandria American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages 01.03.2024
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ISSN0015-718X
1944-9720
DOI10.1111/flan.12732

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Abstract Reading‐while‐listening (RWL) has been suggested to facilitate reading comprehension by establishing letter‐to‐sound correspondences in the word recognition process. However, previous findings are inconsistent regarding the effect of RWL on foreign language (L2) reading comprehension. To understand why such inconsistency occurs, the moderating role of L2 orthographic characteristics in the effects of RWL on L2 propositional comprehension was examined. The orthographic characteristics of a language are of particular relevance as languages differ in the time course and the degree to which visual and phonological coding strategies are involved in word recognition. L1 Korean (alphabetic, shallow orthography) intermediate undergraduate learners of Chinese (nonalphabetic), English (alphabetic, deep orthography), and Spanish (alphabetic, shallow orthography) read and read‐while‐listened to authentic reading texts in their target language, and solved a set of written, untimed multiple‐choice questions to test their propositional comprehension. Results indicated that learners of an L2 with a larger distance (i.e., Chinese) from the L1 benefitted more from RWL, indicating that L2 orthographic characteristics interacted with input modality. Pedagogical implications for the use of RWL are discussed coupled with qualitative findings of students' perceptions. The Challenge The instructional practice of reading‐while‐listening (RWL) has been encouraged with a belief in its efficacy to promote L2 reading comprehension but previous research rendered mixed findings. How should then RWL be used? To understand why such inconsistency occurs and guide ways to use RWL in a more nuanced way, the present study deconstructs the nature of RWL by means of examining the moderating role of the cross‐linguistic orthographic distance between learners' L1 and L2.
AbstractList Reading‐while‐listening (RWL) has been suggested to facilitate reading comprehension by establishing letter‐to‐sound correspondences in the word recognition process. However, previous findings are inconsistent regarding the effect of RWL on foreign language (L2) reading comprehension. To understand why such inconsistency occurs, the moderating role of L2 orthographic characteristics in the effects of RWL on L2 propositional comprehension was examined. The orthographic characteristics of a language are of particular relevance as languages differ in the time course and the degree to which visual and phonological coding strategies are involved in word recognition. L1 Korean (alphabetic, shallow orthography) intermediate undergraduate learners of Chinese (nonalphabetic), English (alphabetic, deep orthography), and Spanish (alphabetic, shallow orthography) read and read‐while‐listened to authentic reading texts in their target language, and solved a set of written, untimed multiple‐choice questions to test their propositional comprehension. Results indicated that learners of an L2 with a larger distance (i.e., Chinese) from the L1 benefitted more from RWL, indicating that L2 orthographic characteristics interacted with input modality. Pedagogical implications for the use of RWL are discussed coupled with qualitative findings of students' perceptions. The Challenge The instructional practice of reading‐while‐listening (RWL) has been encouraged with a belief in its efficacy to promote L2 reading comprehension but previous research rendered mixed findings. How should then RWL be used? To understand why such inconsistency occurs and guide ways to use RWL in a more nuanced way, the present study deconstructs the nature of RWL by means of examining the moderating role of the cross‐linguistic orthographic distance between learners' L1 and L2.
Reading‐while‐listening (RWL) has been suggested to facilitate reading comprehension by establishing letter‐to‐sound correspondences in the word recognition process. However, previous findings are inconsistent regarding the effect of RWL on foreign language (L2) reading comprehension. To understand why such inconsistency occurs, the moderating role of L2 orthographic characteristics in the effects of RWL on L2 propositional comprehension was examined. The orthographic characteristics of a language are of particular relevance as languages differ in the time course and the degree to which visual and phonological coding strategies are involved in word recognition. L1 Korean (alphabetic, shallow orthography) intermediate undergraduate learners of Chinese (nonalphabetic), English (alphabetic, deep orthography), and Spanish (alphabetic, shallow orthography) read and read‐while‐listened to authentic reading texts in their target language, and solved a set of written, untimed multiple‐choice questions to test their propositional comprehension. Results indicated that learners of an L2 with a larger distance (i.e., Chinese) from the L1 benefitted more from RWL, indicating that L2 orthographic characteristics interacted with input modality. Pedagogical implications for the use of RWL are discussed coupled with qualitative findings of students' perceptions. The instructional practice of reading‐while‐listening (RWL) has been encouraged with a belief in its efficacy to promote L2 reading comprehension but previous research rendered mixed findings. How should then RWL be used? To understand why such inconsistency occurs and guide ways to use RWL in a more nuanced way, the present study deconstructs the nature of RWL by means of examining the moderating role of the cross‐linguistic orthographic distance between learners' L1 and L2.
Reading-while-listening (RWL) has been suggested to facilitate reading comprehension by establishing letter-to-sound correspondences in the word recognition process. However, previous findings are inconsistent regarding the effect of RWL on foreign language (L2) reading comprehension. To understand why such inconsistency occurs, the moderating role of L2 orthographic characteristics in the effects of RWL on L2 propositional comprehension was examined. The orthographic characteristics of a language are of particular relevance as languages differ in the time course and the degree to which visual and phonological coding strategies are involved in word recognition. LI Korean (alphabetic, shallow orthography) intermediate undergraduate learners of Chinese (nonalphabetic), English (alphabetic, deep orthography), and Spanish (alphabetic, shallow orthography) read and read-while-listened to authentic reading texts in their target language, and solved a set of written, untimed multiple-choice questions to test their propositional comprehension. Results indicated that learners of an L2 with a larger distance (i.e., Chinese) from the LI benefitted more from RWL, indicating that L2 orthographic characteristics interacted with input modality. Pedagogical implications for the use of RWL are discussed coupled with qualitative findings of students' perceptions.
Author Koh, Joanne
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CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_1080_15434303_2024_2438151
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Snippet Reading‐while‐listening (RWL) has been suggested to facilitate reading comprehension by establishing letter‐to‐sound correspondences in the word recognition...
Reading-while-listening (RWL) has been suggested to facilitate reading comprehension by establishing letter-to-sound correspondences in the word recognition...
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StartPage 163
SubjectTerms Chinese as a second language
English as a second language
Grapheme phoneme correspondence
Graphemes
Korean language
L2 reading comprehension
Language
Linguistics
Listening
Listening comprehension
Literacy
Multiple choice
orthographic characteristics
Orthographic Symbols
Orthography
Pedagogy
Phonology
propositional comprehension
Reading comprehension
Reading Skills
reading‐while‐listening
Second language learning
Second language reading
Spanish as a second language
visual word recognition
Word recognition
Writing
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Title Deconstructing the benefits of reading‐while‐listening on L2 reading comprehension: The influence of cross‐orthographic distance
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