psychology of reading

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Psychology of Reading Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

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Page 1: Psychology Of Reading

Psychology of Reading

Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

Page 2: Psychology Of Reading

E.B. Huey (1908)

“ . . .to completely analyze what we do when we read would almost be the acme of a psychologist’s achievements, for it would be to describe very many of the most intricate workings of the human mind . . .”

Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

Page 3: Psychology Of Reading

Trends

Behaviorism

Cognitive Psychology

Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

Page 4: Psychology Of Reading

Approaches

Stimulus-DrivenText Driven

Bottom up approach to reading

Page 5: Psychology Of Reading

Early Bottom-Up Model of ReadingA

P + A + T PAT

Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

Page 6: Psychology Of Reading

LaBerge & Samuels Study

*Research carried out in 1972 –

demonstrated that we do not read

bottom up exclusively. Words with

1 , 4 or + letters generally take

the same amount of time to read !!

We do not read letter by letter, building up words from individual letters

Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

Page 7: Psychology Of Reading

results?

word superiority effect

Some words with more letters

may be read faster than words

with fewer letters

Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

Page 8: Psychology Of Reading

Top-downModelMiscue- analysis of readers’ errors as they read aloud

I walked up the sidewalk, across the porch, and

knocked on the door of the house.

Goodman noted that when they misread a

word, good readers are more likely than

poor readers to substitute a word that

makes sense in the sentence context

homehorsehow

Page 9: Psychology Of Reading

Top-downModelSemantic priming effects

chairLess fluent when

read alone. More

easily recognized

when read after the

word “table”

Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

Page 10: Psychology Of Reading

Top-downModelSemantic priming effects

chair

At the head of the table was a beautiful

chair.

Less fluent when

read alone. More

easily recognized

when read after the

word “table”

Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

Page 11: Psychology Of Reading

Top-downModelSemantic priming effects

doctorLess fluent when

read alone. More

easily recognized

when read after the

word “nurse”

Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

Page 12: Psychology Of Reading

Top-downModelSemantic priming effects

doctor

The hospital administration, nursing

staff, and doctors were professional and

knowledgeable.

Less fluent when

read alone. More

easily recognized

when read after the

word “nurse”

Page 13: Psychology Of Reading

Top-downModelPrior knowledge effects

When Daku, Kazimir, and Yannickarrived, Tiffany was sitting in her living room writing some notes.

Page 14: Psychology Of Reading

Top-downModelPrior knowledge effects

When Daku, Kazimir, and Yannickarrived, Tiffany was sitting in her living room writing some notes.

Page 15: Psychology Of Reading

InteractiveModelNot a compromise between bottom up or top-down approach to reading – a little of both

The text on the page

Context from previous text

Prior knowledge

Reading goals

Reading is…

Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

Page 16: Psychology Of Reading

InteractiveModelWhere does all of this stuff go?

Long Term Memory

LettersWords

Word meaningsMemory for general story structures

Memory for a specific textPrior knowledge of the topic

Page 17: Psychology Of Reading

InteractiveModelWhere does all of this stuff go?

LTM

attention

Automaticity

Page 18: Psychology Of Reading

Interactive model & automaticity

John Stroop

Page 19: Psychology Of Reading

Interactive model & automaticity

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Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

Page 20: Psychology Of Reading

Interactive model & automaticity

GREEN BLUE RED GREEN GREEN

RED BLUE BLUE RED BLUE

BLUE GREEN RED BLUE RED

GREEN RED GREEN BLUE RED

Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

Page 21: Psychology Of Reading

reading instruction

Reading furnishes the mindonly with materials ofknowledge; it is thinkingthat makes what we readours.

--John Locke

Page 22: Psychology Of Reading

student grouping

Peer tutoring

Cross-age tutoringSmall learning groups

Combined group formats

Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

Page 23: Psychology Of Reading

English language learnerAssess need

empathize

Sense of belonging

Assign buddy

Teach keywords

Read/reread aloud

Opportunities for success

Keep track of language process

Value bilingualism

Encourage family involvement

Foster appreciation of cultural diversity

Page 24: Psychology Of Reading

Students with learning disabilities

Teach vocabulary word before you start reading

Preview the contentRead passage aloud

High interest reading material

Focus strategies Short passages or breaks

Physical limitations?

Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

Page 25: Psychology Of Reading

Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body.

Sir richard steele

Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.

Page 26: Psychology Of Reading

Presented by: Brent Daigle, Ph.D.