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Abstract

Volume 120 • Number 2

Summer 2007



 


The effect of written text on comprehension of spoken English as a foreign language

YALI DIAO, PAUL CHANDLER, and JOHN SWELLER
University of New South Wales

Based on cognitive load theory, this study investigated the effect of simultaneous written presentations on comprehension of spoken English as a foreign language. Learners' language comprehension was compared while they used 3 instructional formats: listening with auditory materials only, listening with a full, written script, and listening with simultaneous subtitled text. Listening with the presence of a script and subtitles led to better understanding of the scripted and subtitled passage but poorer performance on a subsequent auditory passage than listening with the auditory materials only. These findings indicated that where the intention was learning to listen, the use of a full script or subtitles had detrimental effects on the construction and automation of listening comprehension schemas.

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ISSN: 1939-8298


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