The purpose of the study was to examine the effectiveness of picture-fading techniques in a multimedia learning system for Chinese word-recognition instruction. A single-subject, multiple-probe baseline design across participants was used. Three first-grade students with multiple disabilities participated in this study. The three participants received word-recognition instruction with picture-fading techniques to identify four Chinese printed words. The results of this study demonstrated that all participants could identify the four printed words correctly without the presence of known pictorial prompts. In conclusion, the use of picture-fading techniques in word-recognition instruction can function as a bridge between pictorial prompts and printed words.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00004356-200509000-00011 | DOI Listing |
Int J Rehabil Res
September 2005
Department of Information and Computer Education, National Taiwan Normal University, Taiwan.
The purpose of the study was to examine the effectiveness of picture-fading techniques in a multimedia learning system for Chinese word-recognition instruction. A single-subject, multiple-probe baseline design across participants was used. Three first-grade students with multiple disabilities participated in this study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effectiveness of two approaches for teaching beginning sight words to 30 TMR students was compared. In Dorry and Zeaman's picture-fading technique, words are taught through association with pictures that are faded out over a series of trials, while in the Edmark program errorless-discrimination technique, words are taught through shaped sequences of visual and auditory--visual matching-to-sample, with the target word first appearing alone and eventually appearing with orthographically similar words. Students were instructed on two lists of 10 words each, one list in the picture-fading and one in the discrimination method, in a double counter-balanced, repeated-measures design.
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