Retelling and the Reading Comprehension of Proficient and Less-Proficient Readers
- 1 July 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in The Journal of Educational Research
- Vol. 84 (6) , 356-362
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00220671.1991.9941816
Abstract
This study investigated the effects of practice in retelling on the prose comprehension of fourth-grade proficient and less-proficient readers across four practice sessions. The subjects in this study were 48 fourth-grade students (24 proficient readers and 24 less-proficient readers). Subjects were assigned, by proficiency level, to one of four story-order conditions. At each of the four sessions, the subjects silently read a story and rendered a free recall. Subjects were provided with opportunities to read and retell; however, no explicit teacher instruction was provided. At the conclusion of the first and fourth sessions, subjects responded to an eight-item cued-recall assessment. Analysis of the free-recall protocols and the responses to cued-recall questions revealed that practice in retelling across only four sessions resulted in significant increases in the number of propositions recalled, the proportion of story structure elements recalled, and the number of cued-recall questions answered correctly for both proficient and less-proficient readers. Practice in retelling resulted in significant improvements in the quantity and quality of the retellings of proficient and less-proficient readers. The results of this study support the hypothesis that by discourse, the reader learns something about organizing and remembering text-acquired information. The findings of this study are presented in light of current theories of verbal learning. Issues related to the use of retelling as a reading-comprehension assessment task are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Quantitative and qualitative effects of repetition on learning from technical text.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1986
- Strengths and weaknesses of the reading level design: A comment on Backman, Mamen, and Ferguson.Psychological Bulletin, 1986
- Effects of Structural Guidance in Story Retelling on Children's Dictation of Original StoriesJournal of Reading Behavior, 1986
- Reading level design: Conceptual and methodological issues in reading research.Psychological Bulletin, 1984
- Can you repeat that? Qualitative effects of repetition and advance organizers on learning from science prose.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1983
- The Teaching of Reading Comprehension according to the Model of Generative LearningReading Research Quarterly, 1981
- What Classroom Observations Reveal About Reading Comprehension InstructionReading Research Quarterly, 1978
- Memorization processes in reading-disabled children.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1977
- Cognitive structures in comprehension and memory of narrative discourseCognitive Psychology, 1977
- Verbal rehearsal and selective attention in children with learning disabilities: A developmental lagJournal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1976