Effects of Illustrations on Reading Performance: Implications for Further LD Research
- 1 May 1980
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Learning Disability Quarterly
- Vol. 3 (2) , 60-70
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1510508
Abstract
This article reviews available research findings on the influence of illustrations on the reading performance (i.e., word recognition and reading comprehension) of beginning readers in general and in specific subgroups of beginning readers (e.g., poor achievers, low-ability students). Findings suggest that the presence of illustrations interferes with poorly achieving and low-ability children's performance on word recognition tasks and that illustrations are of questionable value to such children's performance on reading comprehension tasks. The possibility that illustrations serve to distract the poor reader's attention from the printed word is discussed. The inability to filter out extraneous stimuli and focus selectively on a task frequently seen in learning disabled children is presented in terms of selective attention theory. Suggestions are offered for further research on the effect of illustrations on learning disabled youngsters' reading performance.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- A picture is not always worth a thousand words: Pictures as distractors in reading.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1978
- Learn to Labor and to WaitJournal of Learning Disabilities, 1976
- Automatic Semantic Processing in a Picture-Word Interference TaskChild Development, 1975
- Reading between the Lines: Selective Attention in Good and Poor ReadersChild Development, 1974
- Attention and reading achievement in first-grade boys and girls.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1974
- Selective reading: Attention to the "unattended" lines.Canadian Journal of Psychology / Revue canadienne de psychologie, 1973
- The Visual ImageScientific American, 1972
- Effects of Pictures on Learning to Read, Comprehension and AttitudesReview of Educational Research, 1970
- Attentional process in reading: The effect of pictures on the acquisition of reading responses.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1967
- Reading with and without PicturesThe Elementary School Journal, 1938