Tape-assisted reciprocal teaching: Cognitive bootstrapping for poor decoders

Background: Students who have limited skills in decoding and comprehension and who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be compounded when these students lack access to age‐appropriate and interesting text and have lost the notion of reading as a process o...

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Published inBritish journal of educational psychology Vol. 73; no. 1; pp. 37 - 58
Main Authors Le Fevre, Deidre M., Moore, Dennis W., Wilkinson, Ian A. G.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.03.2003
British Psychological Society
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0007-0998
2044-8279
DOI10.1348/000709903762869905

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Abstract Background: Students who have limited skills in decoding and comprehension and who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be compounded when these students lack access to age‐appropriate and interesting text and have lost the notion of reading as a process of obtaining meaning from print. Aims: This research examined the effects of a modified reciprocal teaching intervention for readers with poor decoding skills and poor comprehension. Tapeassisted reciprocal teaching was used to help students with poor decoding skills develop cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improve their comprehension of high interest expository texts. Methods: Two single‐subject research design studies involving four groups of students were conducted. Study I involved one experimental group and Study II was a multiple baseline design involving three experimental groups. Sample: Each experimental group comprised a heterogeneous mix of six students, three with poor decoding skills and three with adequate decoding skills, all of whom showed poor comprehension. Results: As a result of the tape‐assisted reciprocal teaching, the poor decoders demonstrated improved application of cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improved comprehension. These improvements were shown on both researcherdeveloped and standardised tests as well as on maintenance and transfer measures. The students with adequate decoding skills also showed improvements in comprehension. Conclusions: The success of the intervention for poor decoders suggests that tape assisted reciprocal teaching may be seen as a form of ‘cognitive bootstrapping’ to enable poor readers to escape the cycle of reading failure and engage more meaningfully in the process of reading.
AbstractList Examined the effects of a modified reciprocal teaching intervention for readers with poor decoding skills and poor comprehension. Tape-assisted reciprocal teaching was used to help students with poor decoding skills develop cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improve their comprehension of high interest expository texts. The success of the intervention for poor decoders suggests that tape-assisted reciprocal teaching may be seen as a form of 'cognitive bootstrapping' to enable poor readers to escape the cycle of reading failure and engage more meaningfully in the process of reading. (Original abstract - amended)
Students who have limited skills in decoding and comprehension and who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be compounded when these students lack access to age-appropriate and interesting text and have lost the notion of reading as a process of obtaining meaning from print. This research examined the effects of a modified reciprocal teaching intervention for readers with poor decoding skills and poor comprehension. Tape-assisted reciprocal teaching was used to help students with poor decoding skills develop cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improve their comprehension of high interest expository texts. Two single-subject research design studies involving four groups of students were conducted. Study I involved one experimental group and Study II was a multiple baseline design involving three experimental groups. Each experimental group comprised a heterogeneous mix of six students, three with poor decoding skills and three with adequate decoding skills, all of whom showed poor comprehension. As a result of the tape-assisted reciprocal teaching, the poor decoders demonstrated improved application of cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improved comprehension. These improvements were shown on both researcher-developed and standardised tests as well as on maintenance and transfer measures. The students with adequate decoding skills also showed improvements in comprehension. The success of the intervention for poor decoders suggests that tape assisted reciprocal teaching may be seen as a form of 'cognitive bootstrapping' to enable poor readers to escape the cycle of reading failure and engage more meaningfully in the process of reading.
Background: Students who have limited skills in decoding and comprehension and who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be compounded when these students lack access to age‐appropriate and interesting text and have lost the notion of reading as a process of obtaining meaning from print. Aims: This research examined the effects of a modified reciprocal teaching intervention for readers with poor decoding skills and poor comprehension. Tapeassisted reciprocal teaching was used to help students with poor decoding skills develop cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improve their comprehension of high interest expository texts. Methods: Two single‐subject research design studies involving four groups of students were conducted. Study I involved one experimental group and Study II was a multiple baseline design involving three experimental groups. Sample: Each experimental group comprised a heterogeneous mix of six students, three with poor decoding skills and three with adequate decoding skills, all of whom showed poor comprehension. Results: As a result of the tape‐assisted reciprocal teaching, the poor decoders demonstrated improved application of cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improved comprehension. These improvements were shown on both researcherdeveloped and standardised tests as well as on maintenance and transfer measures. The students with adequate decoding skills also showed improvements in comprehension. Conclusions: The success of the intervention for poor decoders suggests that tape assisted reciprocal teaching may be seen as a form of ‘cognitive bootstrapping’ to enable poor readers to escape the cycle of reading failure and engage more meaningfully in the process of reading.
Students who have limited skills in decoding & comprehension & who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be compounded when these students lack access to age-appropriate & interesting texts, & have lost the notion of reading as a process of obtaining meaning from print. This research examined the effects of a modified reciprocal teaching intervention for readers with poor decoding skills & poor comprehension. Tape-assisted reciprocal teaching was used to help students with poor decoding skills develop cognitive & metacognitive strategies & improve their comprehension of high interest expository texts. Two single-subject research design studies involving four groups of students were conducted. Study I involved one experimental group & study II was a multiple baseline design involving three experimental groups. Each experimental group comprised a heterogeneous mix of 6 students, 3 with poor decoding skills & 3 with adequate decoding skills, all of whom showed poor comprehension. As a result of the tape assisted reciprocal teaching, the poor decoders demonstrated improved application of cognitive & metacognitive strategies & improved comprehension. These improvements were shown on both researcher-developed & standardized tests, as well as on maintenance & transfer measures. The students with adequate decoding skills also showed improvements in comprehension. The success of the intervention for poor decoders suggests that tape assisted reciprocal teaching may be seen as a form of "cognitive bootstrapping" to enable poor readers to escape the cycle of reading failure & engage more meaningfully in the process of reading. 6 Tables, 3 Figures, 48 References. Adapted from the source document
Students who have limited skills in decoding and comprehension and who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be compounded when these students lack access to age-appropriate and interesting text and have lost the notion of reading as a process of obtaining meaning from print.BACKGROUNDStudents who have limited skills in decoding and comprehension and who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be compounded when these students lack access to age-appropriate and interesting text and have lost the notion of reading as a process of obtaining meaning from print.This research examined the effects of a modified reciprocal teaching intervention for readers with poor decoding skills and poor comprehension. Tape-assisted reciprocal teaching was used to help students with poor decoding skills develop cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improve their comprehension of high interest expository texts.AIMSThis research examined the effects of a modified reciprocal teaching intervention for readers with poor decoding skills and poor comprehension. Tape-assisted reciprocal teaching was used to help students with poor decoding skills develop cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improve their comprehension of high interest expository texts.Two single-subject research design studies involving four groups of students were conducted. Study I involved one experimental group and Study II was a multiple baseline design involving three experimental groups.METHODSTwo single-subject research design studies involving four groups of students were conducted. Study I involved one experimental group and Study II was a multiple baseline design involving three experimental groups.Each experimental group comprised a heterogeneous mix of six students, three with poor decoding skills and three with adequate decoding skills, all of whom showed poor comprehension.SAMPLEEach experimental group comprised a heterogeneous mix of six students, three with poor decoding skills and three with adequate decoding skills, all of whom showed poor comprehension.As a result of the tape-assisted reciprocal teaching, the poor decoders demonstrated improved application of cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improved comprehension. These improvements were shown on both researcher-developed and standardised tests as well as on maintenance and transfer measures. The students with adequate decoding skills also showed improvements in comprehension.RESULTSAs a result of the tape-assisted reciprocal teaching, the poor decoders demonstrated improved application of cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improved comprehension. These improvements were shown on both researcher-developed and standardised tests as well as on maintenance and transfer measures. The students with adequate decoding skills also showed improvements in comprehension.The success of the intervention for poor decoders suggests that tape assisted reciprocal teaching may be seen as a form of 'cognitive bootstrapping' to enable poor readers to escape the cycle of reading failure and engage more meaningfully in the process of reading.CONCLUSIONSThe success of the intervention for poor decoders suggests that tape assisted reciprocal teaching may be seen as a form of 'cognitive bootstrapping' to enable poor readers to escape the cycle of reading failure and engage more meaningfully in the process of reading.
Author Moore, Dennis W.
Le Fevre, Deidre M.
Wilkinson, Ian A. G.
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Verbal comprehension
Reading
School age
Language
Motivation
Metacognition
Cognition
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Child
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Snippet Background: Students who have limited skills in decoding and comprehension and who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties...
Students who have limited skills in decoding and comprehension and who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be...
Examined the effects of a modified reciprocal teaching intervention for readers with poor decoding skills and poor comprehension. Tape-assisted reciprocal...
Students who have limited skills in decoding & comprehension & who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be...
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SubjectTerms Biological and medical sciences
Bootstrap methods
Child
Cognition
Cognitive strategies
Comprehension
Decoding
Decoding skills
Early Reading
Educational psychology
Follow-Up Studies
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Grade 4
Humans
Metacognition
Motivation
New Zealand
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Psychopedagogics. Didactics
Reading
Reading Achievement
Reading Comprehension
Reading Deficiencies
Reading disabled children
Reading Failure
Reading Skills
Reading Strategies
Reciprocal
Reciprocal Teaching
Remedial Reading
Surveys and Questionnaires
Tape Recording
Tape recordings
Teaching
Teaching - methods
Videotape Recordings
Vocabulary Development
Title Tape-assisted reciprocal teaching: Cognitive bootstrapping for poor decoders
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