A Study on the Acquisition of the Capacity of Kure College Students to Learn Mathematics Based on Their Basic Reading Comprehension and Learning Conception

2020 ◽  
Vol 68 (6) ◽  
pp. 6_68-6_76
Author(s):  
Naoya HIRAMATSU ◽  
Yuji AKAIKE ◽  
Masaru KAGEYAMA ◽  
Nozomu KAWAKATSU ◽  
Seiji KASAI ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 279-290
Author(s):  
Laura M. Spenceley ◽  
Whitney L. M. Wood ◽  
Marisa Valentino ◽  
Lawrence J. Lewandowski

This study investigated the extent to which standardized reading performance, individual perceptions of reading and test taking skills, and test anxiety predict the amount of extended time needed to equalize test access for college students with disabilities. Thirty-seven college students with a specific learning disorder (LD) and/or an attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) diagnosis who received university test accommodations were recruited to participate in this study, along with 37 controls. All participants individually completed standardized reading tests and rating scales, and a timed reading comprehension task in a group setting. Results indicated that participants receiving test accommodations utilized approximately 14% more time than control participants to complete the timed reading task. Regression analyses indicated that the differences in time required to complete the reading comprehension task were related to participants’ reading fluency and decoding, as well as perceptions of the strength of their reading and test taking skills.


2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Magda Madkour

<p>This quantitative correlational research focused on investigating the relationship between linguistic technology-based integrative teaching approaches and college students’ reading competence. The study occurred in five phases. The first phase involved observing four reading classes to collect data on teachers’ teaching methodologies. The second phase was based on identifying the problems that affect students’ English reading performance. The researcher selected a random sample of 100 female freshmen students from the College of Languages and Translation at Al-Imam Mohamed Ibn Saud Islamic University (IMAMU Univ.), Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The participants responded to a Likert questionnaire regarding their reading problems and strategies. In the third phase, the participants took a reading comprehension exam to determine their exact reading levels. The preliminary data showed the presence of a high degree at the scale of difficulties that students faced in reading comprehension. Students had problems in loud and silent reading, reading speed, and critical and inferential reading, which reflected students’ weak reading skills. The study also pointed to the ineffective traditional teaching strategies as the main cause of this problem. Traditional teaching strategies which depend on general lectures and explaining the mechanical structure of the reading passages did not help students use their cognitive abilities to improve their reading comprehension. The fourth phase of the present study required selecting an experimental group of 35students from the same sample to be taught using the linguistic integrative model for five weeks. At the end of the fifth week, a reading comprehension exam was given to the group to determine the impact of the new teaching methodology on students’ reading competence. The comprehension test was adopted from ACCUPLACER, an integrated computer-assessment designed to evaluate students’ reading skills. The test is designed by Board College in USA, which is a specialized agency in college students’ exams, and it offers diagnostics and intervention support to help students prepare for academic course work. The reading exam covers six skills, including: understanding the text’s purpose and tone; identifying the central ideas; recognizing supporting details; understanding sentences and vocabulary relationships; distinguishing illustration, comparison and contrast, and cause and effect relationships; and understanding inferential meanings. The data analysis showed a significant difference in favor of students who used the linguistic integrative model, indicating the positive impact of technology-based teaching approaches on students’ proficiency in reading. Based on the results of this study, the researcher made the following recommendations: integrate educational technology into teaching the reading courses at the college; provide professional programs for teachers to train them to use the linguistic integrative approaches; and provide linguistic laboratories that are equipped with modern technologies, including reading software, to intensify students’ reading practices. The significance of this study is that it is a contribution in the field of teaching English as a foreign language in general, and reading in particular since it provides a new model that integrates the technology of hypertexts, e-learning, and data mining analysis into a number of linguistic theories including schema theory, the information processing theory, and Krashen’s (1981; 1995) language theory. Providing teachers with training pertinent to the integration of technology into teaching is an important step towards implementing cognitive and metacognitive teaching methods, which will reinforce the efforts of the College of Languages and Translation towards achieving international accreditation.</p>


1975 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 761-762 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Louise Sailor ◽  
Steve E. Ball

Of two groups of 8 college students receiving 15.75 hr. of speed reading training, an experimental group was given an additional 2.25 hr. of peripheral vision training. Peripheral vision increased for both groups, but reading speed improved only in the trained group. Reading comprehension scores were not affected.


1981 ◽  
Vol 53 (3) ◽  
pp. 959-965
Author(s):  
Delphine Yelen ◽  
Gary B. Forbach

College students were classified as either skilled or less skilled readers on the basis of reading comprehension scores and were then asked to judge whether high-frequency words, low-frequency words, orthographically legal nonwords, and orthographically illegal nonwords were words or nonwords. Skilled readers were significantly faster than less skilled readers on this task for all stimulus categories, but the largest differences between groups were found for low-frequency words and legal nonwords. Differences between the groups were larger for orthographically illegal nonwords than for high-frequency words. It was concluded that less skilled college readers do not use orthographic structure as an aid in lexical decisions as well as skilled readers and that their ability to decode even high-frequency words is not as automatic as that of the skilled readers.


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