6533b829fe1ef96bd128ae6d

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Assessing reading and online research comprehension: Do difficulties in attention and executive function matter?

Paavo H.t. LeppänenCarita KiiliCarita KiiliAsko TolvanenLaura KanniainenMikko AroØIstein Anmarkrud

subject

oppiminenSocial Psychologymonivalintatehtävätmedia_common.quotation_subjectlapset (ikäryhmät)online research and comprehensionlukeminenStructural equation modelingEducationTask (project management)FluencyNonverbal communicationoppimisvaikeudetReading (process)verkkosivustotDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATIONverkkoaineistoFunction (engineering)media_commonluetun ymmärtäminenInternetkeskittymiskykyreading comprehensioComprehensionexecutive functionattention difficultiessähköiset julkaisutReading comprehensionlukutaitodigital literacy516 Educational sciencesPsychologyarviointiCognitive psychology

description

This study evaluated the relation between sixth graders' (N = 426) teacher-rated difficulties in attention and executive function (EF) and their comprehension skills. Reading comprehension was assessed with a multiple-choice task and online research and comprehension (ORC) with a problem-solving task. The analyses were controlled for gender, reading fluency and nonverbal reasoning. To investigate differences in students' performance between the tasks, comprehension skills in the multiple-choice task were also controlled for in the ORC task. Structural equation models showed that teacher-rated attention and EF difficulties were related to students' performance more in the problem-solving task than in the multiple-choice task. After controlling for all the background variables, these difficulties explained 9% of the variance of ORC performance in girls and 4% in boys. These results indicate that for students with attention and EF difficulties the ORC task was more challenging than the reading comprehension task. publishedVersion Peer reviewed

10.1016/j.lindif.2021.101985http://hdl.handle.net/10852/89955