Lexical semantic richness : effect on reading comprehension and on readers' hypotheses about the meanings of novel words

Purpose: This study investigates one possible reason for individual differences in vocabulary learning from written context. A Latent Semantic Analysis (LSA) model is used to motivate the prediction of a causal relationship between semantic knowledge for words in a text and the quality of their hypo...

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Main Author: Duff, Dawna Margaret
Other Authors: Tomblin, J. Bruce
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1591
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5643&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-56432019-10-13T04:44:48Z Lexical semantic richness : effect on reading comprehension and on readers' hypotheses about the meanings of novel words Duff, Dawna Margaret Purpose: This study investigates one possible reason for individual differences in vocabulary learning from written context. A Latent Semantic Analysis (LSA) model is used to motivate the prediction of a causal relationship between semantic knowledge for words in a text and the quality of their hypotheses about the semantics of novel words, an effect mediated by reading comprehension. The purpose of this study was to test this prediction behaviorally, using a within subject repeated measures design to control for other variables affecting semantic word learning. Methods: Participants in 6th grades (n=23) were given training to increase semantic knowledge of words from one of two texts, counterbalanced across participants. After training, participants read untreated and treated texts, which contained six nonword forms. Measures were taken of reading comprehension (RC) and the quality of the readers' hypotheses about the semantics of the novel words (HSNW). Text difficulty and semantic informativeness of the texts about nonwords were controlled. Results: All participants had increases in semantic knowledge of taught words after intervention. For the group as a whole, RC scores were significantly higher in the treated than untreated condition, but HSNW scores were not significantly higher in the treated than untreated condition. Reading comprehension ability was a significant moderator of the effect of treatment on HSNW. A subgroup of participants with lower scores on a standardized reading comprehension measure (n=6) had significantly higher HSNW and RC scores in the treated than untreated condition. Participants with higher standardized reading comprehension scores (n=17) showed no effect of treatment on either RC or HSNW. Difference scores for RC and difference scores for HSNW were strongly related, indicating that within subjects, there is a relationship between RC and HSNW. Conclusions: The results indicate that for a subgroup of readers with weaker reading comprehension, intervention to enhance lexical semantic richness had a substantial and significant effect on both their reading comprehension and on the quality of hypotheses that they generated about the meanings of novel words. Neither effect was found for a subgroup of readers with stronger reading comprehension. Clinical and educational implications are discussed. 2015-05-01T07:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1591 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5643&context=etd Copyright 2015 Dawna Margaret Duff Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaTomblin, J. Bruce publicabstract Individual differences Latent Semantic Analysis Reading Reading Comprehension Vocabulary Word Learning Speech Pathology and Audiology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic publicabstract
Individual differences
Latent Semantic Analysis
Reading
Reading Comprehension
Vocabulary
Word Learning
Speech Pathology and Audiology
spellingShingle publicabstract
Individual differences
Latent Semantic Analysis
Reading
Reading Comprehension
Vocabulary
Word Learning
Speech Pathology and Audiology
Duff, Dawna Margaret
Lexical semantic richness : effect on reading comprehension and on readers' hypotheses about the meanings of novel words
description Purpose: This study investigates one possible reason for individual differences in vocabulary learning from written context. A Latent Semantic Analysis (LSA) model is used to motivate the prediction of a causal relationship between semantic knowledge for words in a text and the quality of their hypotheses about the semantics of novel words, an effect mediated by reading comprehension. The purpose of this study was to test this prediction behaviorally, using a within subject repeated measures design to control for other variables affecting semantic word learning. Methods: Participants in 6th grades (n=23) were given training to increase semantic knowledge of words from one of two texts, counterbalanced across participants. After training, participants read untreated and treated texts, which contained six nonword forms. Measures were taken of reading comprehension (RC) and the quality of the readers' hypotheses about the semantics of the novel words (HSNW). Text difficulty and semantic informativeness of the texts about nonwords were controlled. Results: All participants had increases in semantic knowledge of taught words after intervention. For the group as a whole, RC scores were significantly higher in the treated than untreated condition, but HSNW scores were not significantly higher in the treated than untreated condition. Reading comprehension ability was a significant moderator of the effect of treatment on HSNW. A subgroup of participants with lower scores on a standardized reading comprehension measure (n=6) had significantly higher HSNW and RC scores in the treated than untreated condition. Participants with higher standardized reading comprehension scores (n=17) showed no effect of treatment on either RC or HSNW. Difference scores for RC and difference scores for HSNW were strongly related, indicating that within subjects, there is a relationship between RC and HSNW. Conclusions: The results indicate that for a subgroup of readers with weaker reading comprehension, intervention to enhance lexical semantic richness had a substantial and significant effect on both their reading comprehension and on the quality of hypotheses that they generated about the meanings of novel words. Neither effect was found for a subgroup of readers with stronger reading comprehension. Clinical and educational implications are discussed.
author2 Tomblin, J. Bruce
author_facet Tomblin, J. Bruce
Duff, Dawna Margaret
author Duff, Dawna Margaret
author_sort Duff, Dawna Margaret
title Lexical semantic richness : effect on reading comprehension and on readers' hypotheses about the meanings of novel words
title_short Lexical semantic richness : effect on reading comprehension and on readers' hypotheses about the meanings of novel words
title_full Lexical semantic richness : effect on reading comprehension and on readers' hypotheses about the meanings of novel words
title_fullStr Lexical semantic richness : effect on reading comprehension and on readers' hypotheses about the meanings of novel words
title_full_unstemmed Lexical semantic richness : effect on reading comprehension and on readers' hypotheses about the meanings of novel words
title_sort lexical semantic richness : effect on reading comprehension and on readers' hypotheses about the meanings of novel words
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2015
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1591
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5643&context=etd
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