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Fluency Contributes to Comprehension (page 2)

By B. J. Fox
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall

Accuracy

Generally speaking, the fewer the number of miscues, the better the comprehension; the greater the number of miscues, the poorer the comprehension (Daane et al., 2006). Choosing to correct miscues also affects comprehension. Readers who self-correct a larger percentage of miscues comprehend better than their classmates who self-correct a relatively small percentage of miscues (Daane et al., 2006).

Rate

Reading rate affects comprehension. Information enters short-term memory before it is moved to long-term memory, where the reader stores ideas and makes sense of text. Short-term memory holds only a small amount of information and the information stays in short-term memory only a brief period of time. When the pace of reading is too slow, the reader does not move information quickly into long-term memory. Information in short-term memory creates a roadblock that prevents new information from entering, and so less information is moved on to long-term memory. Consequently, plodding readers do not grasp as many ideas as fluent readers.

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