Affiliation:
1. an assistant pmfessor in the Department of Special Education at George Peabody College of Vanderbilt University
2. an associate pmfessor in the Department o f Special Education at Peabody College of Vanderbilt University
3. Linn Maxwell is an assistant pmfessor in the Department o f Education at Russell SageCollege
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to assess the criterion, construct, and concurrent validity of four informal reading comprehension measures: question answering tests, recall measures, oral passage reading tests, and cloze techniques. Mildly and moderately handicapped middle and junior high school boys (N = 70) were administered the informal measures in one sitting, with four passages equally represented across the four measures and with the administration order of measures counterbalanced. Criterion tests, the Reading Comprehension and Word Study Skills subtests of the Stanford Achievement Test, also were administered in a separate sitting. Results indicated that the correct oral reading rate score demonstrated the strongest criterion validity, with adequate construct and concurrent validity. A second acceptable index was the written recall measure. Implications for designing reading comprehension monitoring procedures are discussed.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Education
Cited by
313 articles.
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