Increasing Metacomprehension in Learning Disabled and Normally Achieving Students through Self-Questioning Training
- 1 August 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Learning Disability Quarterly
- Vol. 5 (3) , 228-240
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1510290
Abstract
This study investigated the hypothesis that insufficient metacomprehension is one possible cause underlying learning disabled adolescents' comprehension problems, and that training them to monitor their understanding of important textual elements fosters metacomprehension and, consequently, improves their comprehension performance. A total of 120 learning disabled eighth and ninth graders and normally achieving sixth graders participated in the study. Half the subjects were randomly assigned to receive a 5-step self-questioning training in which they learned to monitor their understanding of important textual units. The results clearly showed that training substantially increased learning disabled adolescents' awareness of important textual units, as well as their ability to formulate good questions involving those units. Moreover, training facilitated their comprehension performance. However, training did not substantially increase normally achieving sixth graders' metacomprehension or comprehension performance. The differential effects of training on the two groups of students underscore the inactive nature of the learning disabled adolescents' reading as opposed to the active nature of reading in normally achieving sixth graders.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Spontaneous monitoring and regulation of learning: A comparison of successful and less successful fifth graders.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1980
- Realizing That You Don't Understand: Elementary School Children's Awareness of InconsistenciesChild Development, 1979
- An investigation of lookbacks during studying∗Discourse Processes, 1979
- Increasing Retention of Main Ideas through Questioning StrategiesLearning Disability Quarterly, 1979
- Story Retelling Used with Average and Learning Disabled Readers as a Measure of Reading ComprehensionLearning Disability Quarterly, 1978
- The Development and Evaluation of a Self-Questioning Study TechniqueReading Research Quarterly, 1978
- Recall of thematically relevant material by adolescent good and poor readers as a function of written versus oral presentation.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1977
- The Role of Nonspecific Factors in the Task Performance of Learning Disabled ChildrenJournal of Learning Disabilities, 1977
- Effect of question production and answering on prose recall.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1975
- THE EFFECTS OF PROMPTING QUESTION‐ASKING UPON ON‐TASK BEHAVIOR AND READING COMPREHENSION1Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1974