The Effects of Two Repeated Reading Interventions on Generalization of Fluency
- 1 February 1992
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Learning Disability Quarterly
- Vol. 15 (1) , 21-28
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1510562
Abstract
A multitreatment, single-subject research design was used to compare the effects on gains in fluency of two types of mastery criteria for repeated reading. The subjects were four males with learning disabilities, who were at a beginning reading level. One intervention required the students to reread a passage until they demonstrated three successive improvements; the other intervention required rereading until 90 correct words per minute was reached. Both types of criteria resulted in fluency gains for all students, with a mean gain of 58% under the improvements condition and 62% under the fixed-rate condition. The successive improvements criterion appeared to be the more efficient and showed consistent positive effects of fluency gains on generalization to unpracticed passages.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of Repeated Reading on Second-Grade Transitional Readers' Fluency and ComprehensionReading Research Quarterly, 1987
- Developing Reading Fluency in Learning Disabled StudentsTEACHING Exceptional Children, 1986
- The Effect of Repeated Readings on Reading Rate, Speech Pauses, and Word Recognition AccuracyReading Research Quarterly, 1985
- The Method of Repeated ReadingsJournal of Learning Disabilities, 1983
- Repeated ReadingJournal of Learning Disabilities, 1982
- Status of SLD Programs: Indications from a Teacher SurveyLearning Disability Quarterly, 1981
- The Effect of Practice through Repeated Reading on Gain in Reading Ability Using a Computer-Based Instructional SystemReading Research Quarterly, 1981
- The Missing Ingredient: Fluent Oral ReadingThe Elementary School Journal, 1981
- Turn Kids on with Repeated ReadingsTEACHING Exceptional Children, 1980
- Toward a theory of automatic information processing in readingCognitive Psychology, 1974