thinking out loud poster 5.25.15

1
THINKING OUT LOUD: The Internalization of Speech and its Roles in the Development of Silent Reading Lola Less & William Horton Northwestern University, Evanston, IL Many children read “out loud” to themselves before acquiring the ability to read silently. Are reading aloud and reading silently two sides of the same coin, or are they two different points on a spectrum of reading acquisition? Does reading aloud provide benefits for children in the early stages of reading development? The speech internalization theory of silent reading suggests… Reading begins as a purely oral process, creating a bridge between the written word and oral language Oral reading is gradually internalized over time: First, as private speech (overt speech not addressed to anyone else) Then, as subvocalizations (movement in the speech musculature) And finally, in the form of completely silent reading Previous research has demonstrated that… Children and adults produce more private speech in cognitively challenging tasks Discouraging speech can be detrimental to performance on some cognitive tasks (e.g. the Wisconsin Card Sorting Task) Encouraging private speech increases performance on difficult cognitive tasks The present study examines how encouraging or suppressing oral movement (and, therefore, speech) during reading will impact children’s reading comprehension and fluency, and whether these effects are mediated by children’s tendency to spontaneously read aloud or read silently to themselves. Hypotheses: 1. Suppressing oral movement should hurt reading comprehension and fluency. Especially for children who spontaneously read aloud (i.e. children in earlier stages of silent reading internalization) compared to those who spontaneously read silently (i.e. children in later stages of silent reading internalization). 2. Encouraging oral movement should help reading comprehension and fluency. Especially for children in earlier stages of silent reading internalization, compared to children in later stages of silent reading internalization. Participants: Twenty-eight 5- through 7-year-olds (N = 11 female, M age = 79 mo., SD = 10.9 mos.) from the Chicago Metropolitan area and surrounding suburbs. Procedure: 1) First, spontaneous reading behavior was observed. Children read a story (matched to their reading level) without any instructions as to how they should read it (i.e. aloud or silently). 2) Then, based on spontaneous reading, children were sorted into two groups: Aloud (any vocalization) or Silent (no vocalizations). 3) Then, children participated in two counterbalanced conditions: Suppression condition (read while wearing wax lips intended to prevent vocalizations) Encouragement condition (explicitly told read the stories aloud). Comprehension Scores A main effect of Group: Silent readers answered comprehension questions with greater accuracy than aloud readers, F(1,20) = 4.75, MSE = 0.06, p = 0.04 A main effect on Condition, F(2,40) = 4.26, MSE = 0.02, p = 0.02 Mean comprehension scores in the suppression condition were significantly lower than the spontaneous condition, t(21) = 2.92, p = 0.008 Mean comprehension scores in the suppression condition were marginally lower than the encouragement condition, t(21) = - 2.04, p = 0.054 The encouragement and spontaneous conditions did not significantly differ, t(27) = 1.22, p = 0.233. Non-significant group X condition interaction, F(2,40) = 0.921, MSE = 0.02, p = 0.41 Post-hoc comparisons across conditions were computed for the Aloud cohort: Comprehension was significantly worse in the suppression condition than the spontaneous condition, t(12) = 2.73, p = 0.02 Comprehension was marginally worse in the suppression condition than the encouragement condition, t(12) = -1.87, p = 0.08 Comprehension did not significantly differ between the spontaneous and encouragement conditions, t(16) = 1.44, p = 0.17 Post-hoc comparisons for the silent cohort did not show any significant differences across conditions, with all t-tests yielding p > 0.26. * These results remain even after controlling for age and reading level (i.e. running the same analyses as ANCOVAs with mean-centered age and reading level as covariates) Fluency Scores No main effect of group, F(1, 20) = 0.03, MSE = 3941.71 p = 0.88 No main effect of condition, F(2, 40) = 1.03, MSE = 646.31, p = 0.37 No group X condition interaction, F(2, 40) = 1.87, MSE = 646.31, p = 0.17 INTRODUCTION The present study set out to provide a better understanding of reading development through the suppression and encouragement of oral movement. Suppressing oral movement did negatively impact reading comprehension (specifically, as compared to spontaneous reading comprehension). However, encouraging oral movement did not yield the predicted effects. In fact, reading aloud actually yielded slightly lower scores than reading spontaneously Suppressing speech also appeared to have a greater negative effect on children who spontaneously read aloud. However, the absence of a statistically significant interaction suggests this should be treated with caution. Finally, silent readers were found to have significantly better overall comprehension across conditions than did children who read aloud. No effects were found with regard to fluency, but this may not have been a sensitive measure of fluent reading. While encouraging reading out loud may not have a positive effect on comprehension, subarticulations may play an important role in the reading comprehension process. Reading comprehension suffered when readers were stifled, especially for less advanced readers (who may still rely on oral language to derive meaning from written words). Regardless of age, children who read silently tend to be better at comprehending texts. Future directions include following up with the same participants and observing their reading behaviors to see how and/or if they have changed, monitoring which types of questions suffered the most during different reading modalities, and identifying the temporal location of the neglected content in a story This work was supported by the Benton J. Underwood Research Fellowship and an Academic Year Undergraduate Research Grant (IRB # STU00095658) METHOD RESULTS DISCUSSION REFERENCES 1. Duncan, R. M., & Cheyne, J. A. (2002). Private speech in young adults Task difficulty , self-regulation , and psychological predication. Cognitive Development, 16, 889–906. 2. Johns, J. (2008). Basic reading inventory: Pre-primer through grade twelve and early literacy assessments. Kendall Hunt Publishing, 10 th Edition. 3. Liva, A., Fijalkow, E., & Fijalkow, J. (1994). Learning to Use Inner Speech for Improving Reading and Writing of Poor Readers. European Journal of Psychology of Education, 9(4), 321–330. 4. Miyake, A., Emerson, M. J., Padilla, F., & Ahn, J. (2004). Inner speech as a retrieval aid for task goals: the effects of cue type and articulatory suppression in the random task cuing paradigm. Acta Psychologica, 115(2-3), 123–42. doi:10.1016/j.actpsy.2003.12.004 5. Prior, S. M., & Welling, K. A. (2001). The transition form oral to silent reading. Reading Psychology, 22, 1–15 6. Wozniak, R. H. (1975). A dialectical paradigm for psychological research: Implications drawn from the history of psychology in the Soviet Union. Human Development, 18, 18–34. 7. Wright, G., Sherman, R., & Jones, T. B. (2004). Are silent reading behaviors of first graders really All Participants Spontaneous Reading Condition SILENT ALOUD Suppression Condition Suppression Condition Encouragement Condition Encouragement Condition Aloud Silent Grand Total 0.4 0.45 0.5 0.55 0.6 0.65 0.7 0.75 0.8 0.85 Reading Comprehension Spontaneous Suppression Encouragement Groups Comprehension Score (%) Aloud Silent Grand Total 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 Reading Fluency Spontaneous Suppression Encouragement Groups Fluency (words per minute) Silent readers performed better that children who read aloud. Overall, all children demonstrated significantly worse comprehension in the suppression condition than the spontaneous condition. There was no significant interaction. Overall, there were no main effects of group or condition, and no significant group X condition interaction Group N (f) M age (SD) mo. Aloud 17 (8) 75.5 (9.0) Silent 11 (3) 80.1 (7.2) Children in the Aloud group and children in the Silent group were not significantly different in previous preschool attendance, previous reading instruction, or in frequency of reading with parents at home. The two groups did not differ significantly in age, t(26) = -1.43, p = 0.17 or in mean reading level, t(20) = 0.86, p = 0.40. Measures: Comprehension Score: Children answered a series of multiple-choice questions testing their understanding of each story. Fluency Score: Video data was analyzed to measure reading fluency (words read per minute). Analysis: Using a 2 X 3 analysis of variance (ANOVA) calculation, both comprehension scores and fluency scores were compared between groups and between conditions.

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Page 1: Thinking Out Loud Poster 5.25.15

THINKING OUT LOUD: The Internalization of Speech and its Roles in the Development of Silent Reading

Lola Less & William HortonNorthwestern University, Evanston, IL

Many children read “out loud” to themselves before acquiring the ability to read silently. Are reading aloud and reading silently two sides of the same coin, or are they two

different points on a spectrum of reading acquisition? Does reading aloud provide benefits for children in the early stages of reading

development?

The speech internalization theory of silent reading suggests… Reading begins as a purely oral process, creating a bridge between the written

word and oral language Oral reading is gradually internalized over time:

First, as private speech (overt speech not addressed to anyone else) Then, as subvocalizations (movement in the speech musculature) And finally, in the form of completely silent reading

Previous research has demonstrated that… Children and adults produce more private speech in cognitively challenging tasks Discouraging speech can be detrimental to performance on some cognitive tasks

(e.g. the Wisconsin Card Sorting Task) Encouraging private speech increases performance on difficult cognitive tasks

The present study examines how encouraging or suppressing oral movement (and, therefore, speech) during reading will impact children’s reading comprehension and fluency, and whether these effects are mediated by children’s tendency to spontaneously read aloud or read silently to themselves.

Hypotheses:1. Suppressing oral movement should hurt reading comprehension and fluency.

Especially for children who spontaneously read aloud (i.e. children in earlier stages of silent reading internalization) compared to those who spontaneously read silently (i.e. children in later stages of silent reading internalization).

2. Encouraging oral movement should help reading comprehension and fluency. Especially for children in earlier stages of silent reading internalization, compared to children in later stages of silent reading internalization.

Participants: Twenty-eight 5- through 7-year-olds (N = 11 female, Mage = 79 mo., SD = 10.9 mos.) from the Chicago Metropolitan area and surrounding suburbs. Procedure:1) First, spontaneous reading behavior was observed. Children read a story (matched to their reading level) without any instructions as to how they should read it (i.e. aloud or silently). 2) Then, based on spontaneous reading, children were sorted into two groups:

Aloud (any vocalization) or Silent (no vocalizations). 3) Then, children participated in two counterbalanced conditions:

Suppression condition (read while wearing wax lips intended to prevent vocalizations) Encouragement condition (explicitly told read the stories aloud).

Comprehension Scores A main effect of Group: Silent readers answered comprehension questions with greater

accuracy than aloud readers, F(1,20) = 4.75, MSE = 0.06, p = 0.04 A main effect on Condition, F(2,40) = 4.26, MSE = 0.02, p = 0.02

Mean comprehension scores in the suppression condition were significantly lower than the spontaneous condition, t(21) = 2.92, p = 0.008

Mean comprehension scores in the suppression condition were marginally lower than the encouragement condition, t(21) = -2.04, p = 0.054

The encouragement and spontaneous conditions did not significantly differ, t(27) = 1.22, p = 0.233.

Non-significant group X condition interaction, F(2,40) = 0.921, MSE = 0.02, p = 0.41

Post-hoc comparisons across conditions were computed for the Aloud cohort: Comprehension was significantly worse in the suppression condition than the

spontaneous condition, t(12) = 2.73, p = 0.02 Comprehension was marginally worse in the suppression condition than the

encouragement condition, t(12) = -1.87, p = 0.08 Comprehension did not significantly differ between the spontaneous and

encouragement conditions, t(16) = 1.44, p = 0.17 Post-hoc comparisons for the silent cohort did not show any significant differences across

conditions, with all t-tests yielding p > 0.26.

* These results remain even after controlling for age and reading level (i.e. running the same analyses as ANCOVAs with mean-centered age and reading level as covariates)

Fluency Scores No main effect of group, F(1, 20) = 0.03, MSE = 3941.71 p = 0.88 No main effect of condition, F(2, 40) = 1.03, MSE = 646.31, p = 0.37 No group X condition interaction, F(2, 40) = 1.87, MSE = 646.31, p = 0.17

INTRODUCTION

The present study set out to provide a better understanding of reading development through the suppression and encouragement of oral movement. Suppressing oral movement did negatively impact reading comprehension (specifically, as compared to spontaneous reading comprehension).

However, encouraging oral movement did not yield the predicted effects. In fact, reading aloud actually yielded slightly lower scores than reading spontaneously

Suppressing speech also appeared to have a greater negative effect on children who spontaneously read aloud. However, the absence of a statistically significant interaction suggests this should be treated with caution.

Finally, silent readers were found to have significantly better overall comprehension across conditions than did children who read aloud.

No effects were found with regard to fluency, but this may not have been a sensitive measure of fluent reading.

While encouraging reading out loud may not have a positive effect on comprehension, subarticulations may play an important role in the reading comprehension process. Reading comprehension suffered when readers were stifled, especially for less advanced readers (who may still rely on oral language to derive meaning from written words).

Regardless of age, children who read silently tend to be better at comprehending texts.

Future directions include following up with the same participants and observing their reading behaviors to see how and/or if they have changed, monitoring which types of questions suffered the most during different reading modalities, and identifying the temporal location of the neglected content in a story

This work was supported by the Benton J. Underwood Research Fellowship and an Academic Year Undergraduate Research Grant (IRB # STU00095658)

METHOD

RESULTS

DISCUSSION

REFERENCES1. Duncan, R. M., & Cheyne, J. A. (2002). Private speech in young adults Task difficulty , self-regulation , and psychological predication. Cognitive

Development, 16, 889–906.2. Johns, J. (2008). Basic reading inventory: Pre-primer through grade twelve and early literacy assessments. Kendall Hunt Publishing, 10th Edition. 3. Liva, A., Fijalkow, E., & Fijalkow, J. (1994). Learning to Use Inner Speech for Improving Reading and Writing of Poor Readers. European Journal

of Psychology of Education, 9(4), 321–330.4. Miyake, A., Emerson, M. J., Padilla, F., & Ahn, J. (2004). Inner speech as a retrieval aid for task goals: the effects of cue type and articulatory

suppression in the random task cuing paradigm. Acta Psychologica, 115(2-3), 123–42. doi:10.1016/j.actpsy.2003.12.0045. Prior, S. M., & Welling, K. A. (2001). The transition form oral to silent reading. Reading Psychology, 22, 1–156. Wozniak, R. H. (1975). A dialectical paradigm for psychological research: Implications drawn from the history of psychology in the Soviet Union.

Human Development, 18, 18–34.7. Wright, G., Sherman, R., & Jones, T. B. (2004). Are silent reading behaviors of first graders really silent ? The Reading Teacher, 57(6), 546–553.

All Participants Spontaneous Reading Condition

SILENT

ALOUD

Suppression Condition

Suppression Condition

Encouragement Condition

Encouragement Condition

Aloud Silent Grand Total0.4

0.45

0.5

0.55

0.6

0.65

0.7

0.75

0.8

0.85

Reading Comprehension

SpontaneousSuppressionEncouragement

Groups

Com

preh

ensi

on S

core

(%)

Aloud Silent Grand Total0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

Reading Fluency

SpontaneousSuppressionEncouragement

Groups

Flue

ncy

(wor

ds p

er m

inut

e)

Silent readers performed better that children who read aloud. Overall, all children demonstrated significantly worse comprehension in the suppression condition than the spontaneous condition. There was no significant interaction.

Overall, there were no main effects of group or condition, and no significant group X condition interaction

Group N (f) Mage (SD) mo.

Aloud 17 (8) 75.5 (9.0)

Silent 11 (3) 80.1 (7.2)

• Children in the Aloud group and children in the Silent group were not significantly different in previous preschool attendance, previous reading instruction, or in frequency of reading with parents at home.

• The two groups did not differ significantly in age, t(26) = -1.43, p = 0.17 or in mean reading level, t(20) = 0.86, p = 0.40.

Measures: Comprehension Score: Children answered a series of multiple-choice questions testing their understanding of each story.Fluency Score: Video data was analyzed to measure reading fluency (words read per minute).

Analysis:Using a 2 X 3 analysis of variance (ANOVA) calculation, both comprehension scores and fluency scores were compared between groups and between conditions.