Reading comprehension in adolescents with learning disabilities: semantic and syntactic effects.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalJournal of learning disabilities
Year 1989
Ninety-two adolescents with learning disabilities were randomly assigned to four groups to determine the effects of semantic and syntactic complexity on the reading comprehension of content area prose. One group served as a control and read a social studies passage without change. The three treatment groups read passages with syntactic and/or semantic modifications. Comprehension was significantly better for those groups reading passages with combined semantic and syntactic modifications and syntactic modifications alone, when compared to the control group. Semantic modifications alone did not significantly improve comprehension.
Epistemonikos ID: bf606c425caddca5935ebedbaa8f6af78ce4db5f
First added on: May 14, 2022