Revisão bibliográfica

Julho 12, 2007

The Promise of Multimedia Stories for Kindergarten Children At Risk.

This research focuses on the ability of book-based animated stories, when well designed and produced, to have positive effects on young viewers’ narrative comprehension and language skills. Sixty 5-year-olds, learning Dutch as a 2nd language, were randomly assigned to 4 experimental and 2 control conditions. The children profited to some extent from repeated encounters with a storybook with static pictures but more from repeated encounters with the animated form of the story. Both story formats were presented on a computer screen; both included the same oral text spoken in the same voice but the animated story was supplemented with multimedia features (video, sounds, and music) dramatizing the events. Multimedia additions were especially effective for gaining knowledge of implied elements of stories that refer to goals or motives of main characters, and in expanding vocabulary and syntax. The added value of multimedia books was strengthened over sessions. In a group from families with low educational levels who were lagging in language and literacy skills, multimedia storybooks seem to provide a framework for understanding stories and remembering linguistic information. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2007 APA, all rights reserved)

Verhallen, Maria J. A. J.; Bus, Adriana G.; de Jong, Maria T.

Journal of Educational Psychology. 2006 May Vol 98(2) 410-419

Achievement Effects of Embedded Multimedia in a Success for All Reading Program.

Arquivado em: Multimedia, learning — pontequepartiu @ 9:10 pm

Embedded multimedia refers to teaching methods that embed video content within teachers’ lessons. The research of Mayer and others has suggested that multimedia instruction can enhance learning by using the capacity of both visual and verbal memory systems. The present study is an evaluation of embedded multimedia in a year-long randomized clinical trial comparing 1st graders who learned beginning reading through the Success for All program either with or without embedded, brief video components. A study involving 394 first graders in 10 high-poverty schools found significant positive effects on the Word Attack scale, controlling for pretests, in hierarchical linear modeling analyses, with school as the unit of analysis. The results provide partial support for the utility of embedded multimedia as a component of beginning reading instruction. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2007 APA, all rights reserved)

Chambers, Bette; Cheung, Alan C. K.; Madden, Nancy A.; Slavin, Robert E.; Gifford, Richard

Journal of Educational Psychology. 2006 Feb Vol 98(1) 232-237

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