The educational electronic book as a tool for supporting vocabulary and story comprehension of children at risk for learning disabilities

A Shamir, O Korat, R Fellah

    Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

    Abstract

    The effects of an educational electronic book (e-book) on 149 five- to six-year-old kindergarteners' emergent literacy levels were researched in two SES groups: low (LSES) (79 children) vs. middle (MSES) (70 children). In each SES group, children were randomly assigned to four groups. Three groups were assigned to work individually in one of three e-book activity modes: “Read story only”, “Read with dictionary”, or “Read and play” during three similar activity sessions and the fourth group served as a control which received the regular program of the kindergarten. Pre- and post-intervention emergent literacy measures included word meaning, word recognition, and phonological awareness. Results show that word meaning of children from both middle and low SES improved following the educational e-book activity, regardless of mode. Second, LSES children's emergent literacy levels showed relatively greater improvement rates than did those of the MSES children. Third, children in the “Read with dictionary” and “Read and play” activity modes showed more improvement in their emergent literacy levels than did those in the “Read story only” mode. Implications for future research and for education are discussed.
    Original languageAmerican English
    StatePublished - 2008
    Eventannual Meeting of an EARLI Special Interest Group - Göteborg, Sweden
    Duration: 1 May 20081 May 2008

    Conference

    Conferenceannual Meeting of an EARLI Special Interest Group
    Country/TerritorySweden
    CityGöteborg
    Period1/05/081/05/08

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