The effects of graphic organizers on the comprehension and retention of Chinese sixth-grade readers in social studies classrooms

The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of using graphic organizers during prereading, reading, and postreading positions of the comprehension and retention of Chinese sixth-grade students who were identified as below-average or above-average readers. Chinese sixth graders from one...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cheng, Tzung-Yu
Other Authors: Gillespie, Cindy S.
Format: Others
Language:engchi chi
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/handle/handle/175506
http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/897466
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spelling ndltd-BSU-oai-cardinalscholar.bsu.edu-handle-1755062014-07-24T03:32:21ZThe effects of graphic organizers on the comprehension and retention of Chinese sixth-grade readers in social studies classroomsCheng, Tzung-YuReading (Elementary) -- Taiwan.Content area reading.Chinese language -- Study and teaching.Association of ideas -- Graphic methods.Cognitive learning.The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of using graphic organizers during prereading, reading, and postreading positions of the comprehension and retention of Chinese sixth-grade students who were identified as below-average or above-average readers. Chinese sixth graders from one school were first administered The Michigan Chinese Reading Test to identify reading level. Subjects were then assigned to one of the four treatment groups: traditional Chinese social studies method, graphic preorganizers, graphic organizers as a reading guide, and graphic post organizers.Two practice passages were first used to familiarize the subjects with how graphic organizers were utilized in instruction before reading on experimental passage. The dependent measure, 45 multiple-choice questions based on the experimental passage, was administered twice: the next day after the instructional sessions were concluded and again seven days later.The principal analysis to test the three null hypotheses was a 2 x 4 x 2 ANOVA with repeated measures on the last factor corresponding to the two administrations of the test. Two follow-up analyses of variance (ANOVAs) were used to test for differences in treatment condition sepa-rately for above-average readers and below-average readers, using the average of the immediate and the seven-day delayed tests. One Scheffe test was applied to find the location of significant differences among the four treatment conditions for above-average readers. Finally, four follow-up t-tests were used to test for differences in reading level at each of the four treatment levels.Three conclusions were drawn from the statistical analyses of the data: 1) graphic organizers had a significant effect on comprehension and retention only when above-average readers were required to process the organizers during reading; 2) graphic organizers did not produce significantly better comprehension and recall performance of below-average readers; and 3) the effect of graphic organizers was equal to that of the traditional Chinese social studies method in maintaining comprehension and recall for both above-average readers and below-average readers over a one-week delay.Department of Elementary EducationGillespie, Cindy S.2011-06-03T19:24:08Z2011-06-03T19:24:08Z19931993x, 251 leaves : maps ; 28 cm.LD2489.Z64 1993 .C54http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/handle/handle/175506http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/897466Virtual Pressengchi chi
collection NDLTD
language engchi chi
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Reading (Elementary) -- Taiwan.
Content area reading.
Chinese language -- Study and teaching.
Association of ideas -- Graphic methods.
Cognitive learning.
spellingShingle Reading (Elementary) -- Taiwan.
Content area reading.
Chinese language -- Study and teaching.
Association of ideas -- Graphic methods.
Cognitive learning.
Cheng, Tzung-Yu
The effects of graphic organizers on the comprehension and retention of Chinese sixth-grade readers in social studies classrooms
description The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of using graphic organizers during prereading, reading, and postreading positions of the comprehension and retention of Chinese sixth-grade students who were identified as below-average or above-average readers. Chinese sixth graders from one school were first administered The Michigan Chinese Reading Test to identify reading level. Subjects were then assigned to one of the four treatment groups: traditional Chinese social studies method, graphic preorganizers, graphic organizers as a reading guide, and graphic post organizers.Two practice passages were first used to familiarize the subjects with how graphic organizers were utilized in instruction before reading on experimental passage. The dependent measure, 45 multiple-choice questions based on the experimental passage, was administered twice: the next day after the instructional sessions were concluded and again seven days later.The principal analysis to test the three null hypotheses was a 2 x 4 x 2 ANOVA with repeated measures on the last factor corresponding to the two administrations of the test. Two follow-up analyses of variance (ANOVAs) were used to test for differences in treatment condition sepa-rately for above-average readers and below-average readers, using the average of the immediate and the seven-day delayed tests. One Scheffe test was applied to find the location of significant differences among the four treatment conditions for above-average readers. Finally, four follow-up t-tests were used to test for differences in reading level at each of the four treatment levels.Three conclusions were drawn from the statistical analyses of the data: 1) graphic organizers had a significant effect on comprehension and retention only when above-average readers were required to process the organizers during reading; 2) graphic organizers did not produce significantly better comprehension and recall performance of below-average readers; and 3) the effect of graphic organizers was equal to that of the traditional Chinese social studies method in maintaining comprehension and recall for both above-average readers and below-average readers over a one-week delay. === Department of Elementary Education
author2 Gillespie, Cindy S.
author_facet Gillespie, Cindy S.
Cheng, Tzung-Yu
author Cheng, Tzung-Yu
author_sort Cheng, Tzung-Yu
title The effects of graphic organizers on the comprehension and retention of Chinese sixth-grade readers in social studies classrooms
title_short The effects of graphic organizers on the comprehension and retention of Chinese sixth-grade readers in social studies classrooms
title_full The effects of graphic organizers on the comprehension and retention of Chinese sixth-grade readers in social studies classrooms
title_fullStr The effects of graphic organizers on the comprehension and retention of Chinese sixth-grade readers in social studies classrooms
title_full_unstemmed The effects of graphic organizers on the comprehension and retention of Chinese sixth-grade readers in social studies classrooms
title_sort effects of graphic organizers on the comprehension and retention of chinese sixth-grade readers in social studies classrooms
publishDate 2011
url http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/handle/handle/175506
http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/897466
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