The influence of science reading comprehension on South African township learners’ learning of science

The majority of South African township learners have poor reading comprehension skills, which is known to impact negatively on their understanding of content subjects such as science, although the extent of the impact is not fully understood. We explored this impact, as well as the extent to which r...

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Main Authors: Angela Stott, Tanya Beelders
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Academy of Science of South Africa 2019-01-01
Series:South African Journal of Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.sajs.co.za/article/view/5146
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spelling doaj-a604b0f5a9af4ce390c8c1ffef8022772020-11-25T02:00:19ZengAcademy of Science of South AfricaSouth African Journal of Science1996-74892019-01-011151/210.17159/sajs.2019/51465146The influence of science reading comprehension on South African township learners’ learning of scienceAngela Stott0Tanya Beelders1Open and Distant Learning, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South AfricaComputer Science and Informatics, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South AfricaThe majority of South African township learners have poor reading comprehension skills, which is known to impact negatively on their understanding of content subjects such as science, although the extent of the impact is not fully understood. We explored this impact, as well as the extent to which reading comprehension accounted for the differential effectiveness observed for out-of-class, text-dependent science intervention programmes. Eye movement and mouse-click data were collected from 65 Grade-8 and Grade-9 township learners as they read texts and answered electronic quizzes about electric circuits and lightning on a computer fitted with eye-tracking hardware and software. These data were used to describe the learners’ reading and question-answering patterns and derive a composite English for science and technology (EST) reading comprehension index for each learner. Correlations were sought between this index and the learners’ Natural Sciences marks and the benefit gained from two previous out-of-school science intervention programmes. Most learners were able to engage meaningfully with a less text-rich, moderately familiar quiz, but there was a prevalence of reading avoidance, guessing and reliance on superficial text features to answer questions for a more text-rich, unfamiliar quiz. Moderate to strong correlations were found between the EST index and both Natural Sciences and intervention marks. The findings suggest that while a significant number of higher achieving township learners possess sufficient levels of EST reading comprehension skills to benefit from textbased interventions, the majority require help in developing EST reading comprehension skills to enhance the likelihood of the intervention’s success. Significance: • From this study, we infer that a small group of South African township learners, identifiable by their relatively high Natural Sciences marks, are able to read English science texts with sufficient comprehension to be able to benefit from text-dependent interventions, including engagement with self-study interactive software. The majority, however, read such texts at the frustration level, making it unlikely for interventions to be effective if they rely on the learner being able to engage in independent reading.https://www.sajs.co.za/article/view/5146differential intervention effectivenessenglish for science and technologyeye trackingscience educationsecond-language learning
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Angela Stott
Tanya Beelders
spellingShingle Angela Stott
Tanya Beelders
The influence of science reading comprehension on South African township learners’ learning of science
South African Journal of Science
differential intervention effectiveness
english for science and technology
eye tracking
science education
second-language learning
author_facet Angela Stott
Tanya Beelders
author_sort Angela Stott
title The influence of science reading comprehension on South African township learners’ learning of science
title_short The influence of science reading comprehension on South African township learners’ learning of science
title_full The influence of science reading comprehension on South African township learners’ learning of science
title_fullStr The influence of science reading comprehension on South African township learners’ learning of science
title_full_unstemmed The influence of science reading comprehension on South African township learners’ learning of science
title_sort influence of science reading comprehension on south african township learners’ learning of science
publisher Academy of Science of South Africa
series South African Journal of Science
issn 1996-7489
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The majority of South African township learners have poor reading comprehension skills, which is known to impact negatively on their understanding of content subjects such as science, although the extent of the impact is not fully understood. We explored this impact, as well as the extent to which reading comprehension accounted for the differential effectiveness observed for out-of-class, text-dependent science intervention programmes. Eye movement and mouse-click data were collected from 65 Grade-8 and Grade-9 township learners as they read texts and answered electronic quizzes about electric circuits and lightning on a computer fitted with eye-tracking hardware and software. These data were used to describe the learners’ reading and question-answering patterns and derive a composite English for science and technology (EST) reading comprehension index for each learner. Correlations were sought between this index and the learners’ Natural Sciences marks and the benefit gained from two previous out-of-school science intervention programmes. Most learners were able to engage meaningfully with a less text-rich, moderately familiar quiz, but there was a prevalence of reading avoidance, guessing and reliance on superficial text features to answer questions for a more text-rich, unfamiliar quiz. Moderate to strong correlations were found between the EST index and both Natural Sciences and intervention marks. The findings suggest that while a significant number of higher achieving township learners possess sufficient levels of EST reading comprehension skills to benefit from textbased interventions, the majority require help in developing EST reading comprehension skills to enhance the likelihood of the intervention’s success. Significance: • From this study, we infer that a small group of South African township learners, identifiable by their relatively high Natural Sciences marks, are able to read English science texts with sufficient comprehension to be able to benefit from text-dependent interventions, including engagement with self-study interactive software. The majority, however, read such texts at the frustration level, making it unlikely for interventions to be effective if they rely on the learner being able to engage in independent reading.
topic differential intervention effectiveness
english for science and technology
eye tracking
science education
second-language learning
url https://www.sajs.co.za/article/view/5146
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