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The Effects of Technology Use in Literacy Instruction. Annie Harary Education 703.22 Spring 2010. Table of Contents. Introduction Statement of the Problem Review of Related Literature Statement of the Hypothesis Methods Participants Instruments Experimental Design Procedure Results
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The Effects of Technology Use in Literacy Instruction Annie Harary Education 703.22 Spring 2010
Table of Contents • Introduction • Statement of the Problem • Review of Related Literature • Statement of the Hypothesis • Methods • Participants • Instruments • Experimental Design • Procedure • Results • Discussion • Implications
Statement of the Problem • 3 out of 10 students in grades 3-8 are not reading at their grade level • New York City underperforming versus New York State (“New York City,” 2009) • Embarrassment factor • Technology as possible solution
Review of Related Literature • Theorists • Lev Vygotsky • Social interaction; More Knowledgeable Other; Active role in learning (“Social Development Theory,” n.d.) • Howard Gardner • Multiple Intelligences Theory (Gardner, 2000; Gardner & Walters, 1993) • Rita and Kenneth Dunn • Different learning styles (“The Dunn and Dunn Learning Style Model of Instruction,” n.d.)
Review of Related Literature • Electronic Books / CD-ROM Storybooks • PROS • Individualized support (Mollin, 2005; Pearman & Lefever-Davis, 2006; Rhodes & Milby, 2007) • Removes burden of decoding (Lefever-Davis & Pearman, 2005; Mollin, 2005; Pearman & Levefer-Davis, 2006) • Develops phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension (Pearman & Levefer-Davis, 2006; Shamir & Korat, 2006; Wolfson, 2008) • Increases motivation to read (Matthew, 1997) • Higher comprehension scores (Doty, Popplewell, & Byers, 2001; Grimshaw, Dungworth, McKnight, & Morris, 2007; Matthew, 1997; Pearman, 2008)
Review of Related Literature • Electronic Books / CD-ROM Storybooks • CONS • Seen as a game(de Jong & Bus, 2002; Trushell & Maitland, 2005) • Not beneficial to every student(Matthew, 1997; Ricci & Beal, 2002; Trushell & Maitland, 2005) • Become reliant on “help” features(Lefever-Davis & Pearman, 2005)
Review of Related Literature • Laptops / Internet • PROS • Higher student engagement(Barone & Wright, 2008) • Improve reading skills(Mioduser, Tur-Kaspa, & Leitner, 2000) • WebQuests, web sites, instant messaging, blogs(Barone & Wright, 2008; Kaya, O’Connor-Petruso, & Girelli-Carasi, 2010) • CONS • Cost, time, availability, support, teacher skills(Barone & Wright, 2008; McGrail, 2007) • Social isolation, limited communication, off-task behavior(McGrail, 2007)
Review of Related Literature • Interactive White Boards • PROS • Engage and facilitate student participation • Variety of multimodal texts(Shenton & Pagett, 2007) • CONS • Little professional development • Technical support(Shenton & Pagett, 2007)
Review of Related Literature • Artificial Intelligence • PROS • Enhance writing skills; Immediate and increased feedback; Work at own pace • CONS • Limited writing prompts; Superficial revisions (Sternberg, Kaplan, & Borck, 2007; Warschauer & Grimes, 2008) • Digital Storytelling • PROS • Increases comprehension; Encompasses multiple literacy skills; Personal connection; Promotes 21st Century literacy • CONS • Few studies conducted (Robin, 2008)
Review of Related Literature • Audiobooks • PROS • Improve reading skills • Focus on meaning • Listen at own pace (Wolfson, 2008) • LCD Projector • PROS • Read along • Higher student attention • Higher retelling scores (Black, Brill, Eber, & Suomala, 2005)
Statement of the Hypothesis • HR1: The reading comprehension skills, as measured by tests, and motivation to read, as measured by survey questions, of eighteen third-grade students in P.S. X will increase if they read and listen to electronic storybooks through the internet, using laptops, over two sessions.
Participants • 18 Third-Grade students attending P.S. X • 9 males • 9 females • 8 - 9 years old • Gifted class • 10 “above average” readers • 8 “average” readers
Instruments • Consent forms: Principal, Teacher, Parent/Guardian • Surveys • Tests: Multiple Choice and Oral Retelling of Story • Oral retelling of story rubric • Printed Text: Henry’s Freedom Box by Ellen Levine • Technology • Laptops with internet connection • Electronic Storybooks
Experimental Design • Pre-experimental design • One-Group Pretest-Posttest Design • Single group is pretested by reading a traditional printed text • Exposed to the treatment • Reading electronic storybooks through the internet on classroom laptops • Posttested after exposure to the treatment • Symbolic Design • OXO
Threats to Internal Validity History Maturation Testing / Pretest Sensitization Instrumentation Mortality Threats to External Validity Pretest-Treatment Selection-Treatment Interaction Specificity of Variables Treatment Diffusion Reactive Arrangements / Participants Effects Threats to Internal/External Validity
Procedure • Study conducted February 2010 – April 2010 • 2/25/10: Consent forms distributed • 3/1/10: Participants completed Student Surveys 1 and 2 • 3/8/10-3/9/10: Pretest administered • 3/15/10: Participants introduced to electronic storybooks • 3/25/10 & 4/8/10: Posttest administered • 4/8/10: Participants completed Student Survey 2 again
Results The participants mean score on the posttest decreased 4.98% from the pretest
Multiple Choice and Oral Retelling Scores: PRETEST Multiple Choice and Oral Retelling Scores: POSTTEST Results
Results • Motivation to Read After being exposed to reading electronic storybooks, the participants, as a whole, reported on their survey questions that they are now more motivated to read.
Correlation Between Posttest Scores and Student Survey 2: Statement 10: Technology makes reading more fun (End of Action Research) rxy = 0.19 No correlation Correlation Between Posttest Scores and Student Survey 2: Statement 9: Technology can help me become a better reader (End of Action Research) rxy = 0.25 No correlation Results: Correlations
Discussion • The results of this study do not support the original hypothesis that reading electronic storybooks will increase the reading comprehension test scores of eighteen third-grade students in P.S. X. • The results of this study do support the original hypothesis that reading electronic storybooks will increase the motivation to read of eighteen third-grade students in P.S. X.
Discussion • Results consistent with the following findings: • The features of electronic storybooks distract students attention away from the text and adversely affects comprehension (de Jong & Bus, 2002; Trushell & Maitland, 2005) • Comprehension scores after reading electronic texts are higher when measured by oral retellings (Matthew, 1997; Pearman, 2008) • Students that read electronic texts are more motivated to go back and re-read them again, as opposed to those that read printed texts (Matthew, 1997) • Results inconsistent with the following findings: • Comprehension skills are built through interactive CD-ROM storybooks (Lefever- Davis & Pearman, 2005; Pearman & Lefever-Davis, 2006) • Electronic storybooks accompanied by a narration of the text does significantly improve comprehension (Grimshaw, Dungworth, McKnight, & Morris, 2007) • Printed vs. Electronic Storybooks: When comprehension is measured by oral retellings, there is no significant difference (Doty, Popplewell, & Byers, 2001)
Implications • Conduct with larger sample over a longer time period • Participants from gifted class, so the results may not be generalized to “below average” readers • Other means of testing reading comprehension • Posttest (multiple choice questions) may have been too difficult • Use smaller reading passages rather than whole book • More research on the affect of reading electronic storybooks on motivation to read