Pre-reading activities may reduce processing demands in working memory

A quasi-experimental correlational study with EFL Brazilian students (learners)

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15448/1984-7726.2023.1.44423

Keywords:

Pre-reading activities, Working memory capacity, Reading comprehension

Abstract

Reading research has found that pre-reading activities positively affect comprehension, which might also act as a tool to reduce the processing demands in working memory (ROSCIOLI; TOMITCH, 2022). The present study investigated whether there was a correlation between pre-intermediate and advanced Brazilian EFL students’ working memory capacity as measured by the Reading Span Test and their results obtained in comprehension tests after receiving treatment with two pre-reading activities: Contextual Redefinition and Graphic Organizer (MOORE; READENCE; RICKELMAN, 1999). The former focused on building vocabulary, whereas the latter targeted the organizational pattern of the text. There were two dependent measures: written free recall and comprehension questions. We hypothesized that the treatments would change the correlations between readers’ working memory capacity and task performance. Specifically, we expected the correlations between reading span and comprehension to be smaller in the treatment conditions compared to the control. The findings reveal that the activities can affect reading comprehension differently depending on students’ proficiency. The correlations between reading span and comprehension questions scores were smaller when advanced participants received treatment with the Contextual Redefinition. Conversely, there was an increase in the correlations between reading span and written free recall scores when the pre-intermediate group received treatment with the same pre-reading activity. Also, there was a decrease in the correlations between reading span and written free recall scores when pre-intermediate participants received treatment with the Graphic Organizer. Altogether, the Contextual Redefinition reduced processing demands for the advanced participants, whereas the Graphic Organizer did the same for the pre-intermediate group.

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Author Biographies

Tatiana Koerich Rondon, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina (UFSC), Florianópolis, SC, Brasil.

Tatiana Koerich Rondon is a PhD student in Applied Linguistics at the English Graduate Program, Federal
University of Santa Catarina, Brazil. She holds a master’s degree in English. Her main field of interest is individual differences in reading comprehension.

Lêda Maria Braga Tomitch, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina (UFSC), Florianópolis, SC, Brasil.

Lêda Maria Braga Tomitch is a Full Professor at the Foreign Languages Department, Federal University of Santa Catarina. She holds a PhD degree in English. Her interests include working memory capacity and reading, reading and the brain; and reading instruction. Her current research is on bilingual reading in typical and atypical contexts.

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Published

2023-11-29

How to Cite

Koerich Rondon, T., & Braga Tomitch, L. M. (2023). Pre-reading activities may reduce processing demands in working memory: A quasi-experimental correlational study with EFL Brazilian students (learners). Letras De Hoje, 58(1), e44423. https://doi.org/10.15448/1984-7726.2023.1.44423

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