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A comparison of comprehension and production abilities of good and poor readers

Research from several sources indicates that reading disability is often associated with difficulty in comprehending some complex spoken sentences, including those with relative clauses. The present study exploits a new methodology, elicited production, to identify the source of comprehension diffic...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Applied psycholinguistics 1993-06, Vol.14 (2), p.197-227
Main Authors: Bar-Shalom, Eva G., Crain, Stephen, Shankweiler, Donald
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Research from several sources indicates that reading disability is often associated with difficulty in comprehending some complex spoken sentences, including those with relative clauses. The present study exploits a new methodology, elicited production, to identify the source of comprehension difficulties of poor readers. Both the elicited production task and a conventional act-out task were employed in a study of 30 children (aged 7-8), who were selected for reading ability. On the act-out task, the poor readers displayed a high error rate on two relative clause structures (SO and OO relatives), as had been found by Mann, Shankweiler, and Smith (1984), but these structures were elicited from the poor readers as successfully as from the good readers (on more than 80% of trials).
ISSN:0142-7164
1469-1817
DOI:10.1017/S0142716400009553