Abstract

The use of adequate reading comprehension strategies is important to read efficiently. Students with dyslexia not only read slower and less accurately, they also use fewer reading comprehension strategies. To compensate for their decoding problems, they often receive audio-support (narration written text). However, audio-support linearly guides readers from beginning to end through texts, possibly hindering the use of reading comprehension strategies in expository texts and negatively impacting reading time and reading comprehension performance. We examined to what extent audio-support affects reading comprehension strategies, reading times, and reading comprehension performance in 21 secondary school students with dyslexia and 22 typically developing controls. Participants were provided with three types of assignments (summarizing, open-ended questions, statement questions) in each condition (written text with and without audio-support). SMI RED-500 eye tracker captured eye movements during reading. The standard deviation of the weighted fixation duration times on the three paragraphs was considered indicative of the disparity of readers’ attention within the text. Following a discrimination based on experts’ reading behavior and hand-coded validation, these scores visualized whether students used the intensive reading strategy (reading whole text) or selective reading strategy (focusing on part of the text). In open-ended assignments, students divided their attention more over the whole text instead of focusing on one specific part when audio was added. In addition, audio-support increased reading time in students with and without dyslexia in most tasks, while in neither of the tasks audio-support affected reading comprehension performance. Audio-support impacts reading comprehension strategy and reading time in all students.

Highlights

  • Students with dyslexia often receive audio-support via narration of the written text to compensate for their lack of accurate and fluent decoding

  • Audio-support guides readers linearly — from beginning to end — through texts, which possibly hinders the use of more dynamic reading comprehension strategies for expository texts like scanning headers, searching for keywords, etc

  • To understand how audio-support during reading comprehension assignments affects reading comprehension strategies, reading times, and reading comprehension performance, we compared the effects of reading comprehension tasks with and without audio-support in secondary school students with dyslexia as compared to their typically developing peers

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Summary

Introduction

Students with dyslexia often receive audio-support via narration of the written text to compensate for their lack of accurate and fluent decoding. Students with dyslexia read slower and less accurately; they use fewer reading comprehension strategies (Chevalier et al, 2017). Audio-support guides readers linearly — from beginning to end — through texts, which possibly hinders the use of more dynamic reading comprehension strategies for expository texts like scanning headers, searching for keywords, etc. This may impact reading time and comprehension negatively. To understand how audio-support during reading comprehension assignments affects reading comprehension strategies, reading times, and reading comprehension performance, we compared the effects of reading comprehension tasks with and without audio-support in secondary school students with dyslexia as compared to their typically developing peers.

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