A case study of six EFL freshman readers : overview of metacognitive ability in reading

Date

1993

Editor(s)

Advisor

Tannacito, Dan J.

Supervisor

Co-Advisor

Co-Supervisor

Instructor

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Abstract

The present study was designed to investigate metacognitive abilities of six individual readers, particularly their level of awareness about how they read, the strategies they used to comprehend a text, and how their awareness and actual strategy use were reflected in their comprehension. The participants were EFL freshman students at an English-medium university in Turkey. Three sets of verbal data were collected from the participants through the use of mentalistic research methods — think-aloud protocols, retrospective reports, and self-report interviews. Think-aloud protocols and retrospective reports provided data on actual strategy use, and self- report interviews produced information about the readers* metacognitive awareness of their own reading processes and strategies. The use of these different sets of data provided a better understanding of the processes contributing to the readers* comprehension of a text which was assessed through recall protocols. Good comprehenders were found to have a high level of awareness and control of their reading processes. The present results suggest that it was primarily effective and constant use of comprehension monitoring and self-assessment strategies which distinguished good readers from the others. These findings lead to the conclusion that metacognitive awareness and strategy use has the potential to influence comprehension outcomes in a positive manner.

Source Title

Publisher

Course

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Book Title

Keywords

Degree Discipline

Teaching English as a Foreign Language

Degree Level

Master's

Degree Name

MA (Master of Arts)

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

Language

English

Type