Junko Yamashita’s research while affiliated with Nagoya University and other places

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Publications (22)


Research‐Based Reading Instruction
  • Chapter

December 2023

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83 Reads

William Grabe

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Junko Yamashita

This review of teaching reading addresses three foundations for reading development: (a) reading research findings that provide insights into the construct of academic reading abilities, (b) the translation of research findings into a coherent set of curricular principles for reading instruction, and (c) a set of effective instructional practices that draw upon research findings and curricular principles. Research has shown the complexity of skilled reading which integrates a large number of specific linguistic skills and underlying cognitive skills. Two lines of research have major implications for reading instruction: The first centers on the powerful roles of vocabulary and syntax in second language (L2) reading development, and the second centers on the widespread affirmation among researchers that reading experience is the key to becoming a skilled reader. The amount of reading that L2 readers engage in serves as the primary explanation for their developing L2 vocabulary, syntax, fluency, and comprehension skills; amount of reading also supports a range of underlying cognitive abilities critical for reading development (background knowledge, motivation, inferencing, comprehension monitoring, goal setting, and self‐regulation, among others). The curricular principles, stemming from these findings as well as research into effective teaching, highlight concepts that drive effective reading instruction. The instructional practices recommended rely on both the research evidence reviewed and best practices among skilled educators.


2 - How Reading Works: The Building Blocks of Fluency and Comprehension

September 2022

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65 Reads

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1 Citation

Chapter 2: Building Blocks of Fluency and Comprehension. This chapter describes the many component skills and knowledge resources that contribute to reading fluency and reading comprehension. Key component skills addressed include word recognition, orthographic processing, letter-sound correspondences, sight word reading, morphological processing, phonological processing, spelling knowledge and orthographic mapping, syntactic processing, semantic processing, semantic proposition formation, working memory (central executive, phonological loop, episodic buffer), long-term memory, and cognitive executive functions. Other concepts introduced along with component skills include the self-teaching hypothesis, statistical learning, the alphabetic principle, implicit learning, connectionism, lexical access, automaticity, the Lexical Quality Hypothesis, spreading activation, priming effects, word-to-text integration, chunking, meta-linguistic awareness, good-enough parsing, now-or-never processing, chunk-and-pass processing, and usage-based approaches to language learning. The chapter closes with implications for instruction.


20 - Reading Assessment

September 2022

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53 Reads

Chapter 20: Reading Assessment. Reading assessments are used for many purposes, but all appropriate uses of assessment begin from an understanding of the reading construct, an awareness of the development of reading abilities, and an effort to represent the construct in assessment tasks. This chapter first presents a straightforward framework that categorizes the many uses and purposes for assessment. The chapter then outlines and describes a number of major options, though not a comprehensive set, under each category in the assessment framework. These assessment options are equally applicable in both L1 and L2 contexts, though important L2 tests and assessment practices are noted where relevant. The third section considers a number of reading-assessment innovations and challenges. The fourth section addresses two further important issues for reading assessment: Consequences of reading assessment and teacher training for reading assessment. The chapter closes with implications for teachers and for instruction.


18 - Extensive Reading

September 2022

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169 Reads

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1 Citation

Chapter 18: Extensive Reading. Extensive reading (ER) is understood here as an extensive amount of reading. It is not specifically tied only to enjoyable reading or easy reading, although both of these sources of reading are important. The fundamental idea is that a large amount of understandable input (i.e., within students’ linguistic competence) via reading will develop students’ language and knowledge resources through incidental implicit learning. The benefits of extensive reading emerge over time and is fundamental for developing advanced reading abilities. A large amount of reading (extensive reading) leads to better vocabulary knowledge, better background knowledge, and better reading comprehension. Research in both L1 and L2 of contexts are reviewed, and the role of extensive reading (L2) or amount of reading (L1) is the key foundation for reading development and advanced reading comprehension. The chapter concludes with implications for instruction.


9 - Social Contexts of Reading

September 2022

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26 Reads

Chapter 9: Social Contexts of Reading. This chapter focuses on the many social contexts in which reading is carried out and in which reading develops. We learn to read within a family unit, in various school settings (and their associated goals, expectations, and opportunities), in various classrooms, and in interaction with specific teachers and student peers. Students are also influenced by the wider social and cultural expectations of political, religious, ethnic, economic, and social institutions. Social contexts set the stage for successful reading within the first year of life, and language knowledge, as well as beginning reading, is profoundly shaped in the first five years of life. L2 reading, as it often is learned in childhood or adolescence, is also strongly shaped by social contexts in which learning to read is carried out. Four specific issues include the needs for effective teacher training, the status of minority language instruction in K-12 schools, advanced L2 reading instruction, and most importantly, the role of language and reading exposure throughout a learner’s lifetime. The chapter concludes with implications for instruction.


10 - Motivation for Reading

September 2022

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106 Reads

Chapter 10: Motivation for Reading. This chapter explains the critical role of learner motivation for reading development. Research shows that positive motivation improves comprehension both directly and indirectly through greater amounts of extended reading, more effective uses of reading strategies, and greater engagement with reading comprehension processes. Motivation has an important role to play in reading development, and teachers and classroom contexts can have a major impact on student motivation. The chapter reviews the major theories of reading motivation and then focuses more specifically on the research of Guthrie and colleagues, and Schiefele and colleagues. Over the course of decades these researchers have developed key ways to measure motivation and relate motivation specifically to reading development. One consistent major finding is that intrinsic motivation supports amount of reading done by learners, and amount of reading is a major support for reading development. The chapter closes with implications for instruction.


13 - Becoming a Strategic Reader

September 2022

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66 Reads

Chapter 13: Becoming a Strategic Reader. This chapter focuses on the development of the strategic reader, rather than strategies themselves. Strategic readers automatically and routinely apply combinations of effective and appropriate strategies, depending on reader goals, reading tasks, texts being read, and strategic processing abilities. Strategic readers are also aware of their comprehension success in relation to reading goals and apply sets of strategies appropriately to enhance comprehension with difficult texts. Becoming a strategic reader is challenging and requires considerable instruction and support. The chapter reviews research involving several instructional approaches to develop strategic processing, including Collaborative Strategic Reading (CSR), Questioning the Author, Transactional Strategies Instruction (TSI), Promoting Adolescent Comprehension of Text (PACT), and Concept-Oriented Reading Instruction (CORI). The chapter then links strategic reading to the challenges of advanced “reading to learn” goals, and concludes with implications for instruction.


12 - Building Main Idea Comprehension: Syntax and Strategies

September 2022

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22 Reads

Chapter 12: Building Main Idea Comprehension: Syntax and Strategies. Identifying main ideas from a text is the fundamental comprehension process that drives how we understand a text and use that information for whatever goals we have set as readers. Identifying main ideas from a text is the fundamental comprehension process that drives how we understand a text and use that information for whatever goals we have set as readers. Critical to main idea comprehension is word-to-text integration processing. This operates automatically through syntactic processing for skilled readers. Comprehension processes are supported through the functional information provided by syntactic resources. However, when texts are difficult or learners need additional support, strategies provide the bridging mechanism in learning to comprehend texts. Strategies that have shown to be effective in research studies are reviewed. The chapter concludes with implications for instruction.


Reading in a Second Language: Moving from Theory to Practice

September 2022

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1,116 Reads

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264 Citations

Understanding reading abilities and their development is fundamental for language comprehension and human cognition. Now in its second edition, this book draws on research from multiple disciplines to explain reading abilities in both L1 and L2, and shows how this research can be applied in practice in order to support reading development. Research into reading has progressed a great deal since the first edition was published, so this edition has been completely updated and revised, in order to reflect these advances. All chapters present updated research studies, and completely new chapters are included on the neurocognition of reading, reading-writing relationships, and digital reading. If you want to know how reading works, no matter the language(s) involved, as well as how it can be taught effectively, this book provides a persuasive research foundation and many practical insights. It is essential reading for academic researchers and students in Applied Linguistics and TESOL.


17 - Reading Fluency, Reading Rate, and Comprehension

September 2022

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338 Reads

Chapter 17: Reading Fluency, Reading Rate, and Comprehension. This chapter reviews research on the role of reading fluency on reading comprehension in both L1 and L2 contexts. Reading fluency is a complex topic in itself, sometimes seen as a component skill contributing to comprehension and sometimes viewed as a reading goal in itself. Reading fluency is defined according to multiple criteria: automaticity, rate, accuracy, and prosodic phrasing. Research on fluency also involves fluent word reading and fluent text passage reading. As research has demonstrated over decades, word reading fluency contributes to early reading development, but text passage reading is a strong predictor of later reading comprehension. This appears to be true in both L1 and L2 contexts. The chapter reviews the major research findings and concludes with implications for instruction.


Citations (5)


... According to Koda (2005), reading is an interactive activity in which readers obtain knowledge from the text and then combine it with their prior knowledge. Based on related literature on reading (Bernhardt, 1991;Grabe, 2008Grabe, , 2009Kintsch, 2004), China's Standards of English (CSE) defines reading as language users' or learners' employment of their cognitive processes, comprehension strategies, and knowledge to construct meaning from written materials in various contexts and under various conditions (Fan & Zeng, 2019;Zeng & Cao, 2020;Zeng & Fan, 2017). The EFL reading proficiency of secondary school students is generally aligned with Level 3 of CSE (Zeng & Cao, 2020), hence CSE3. ...

Reference:

CSE3 Informed Dynamic Assessment of Northwest Rural Secondary School EFL Learners’ Reading Development
3 - How Reading Works: Comprehension Processes
  • Citing Article
  • September 2022

... Expanding the scope of TBLT research to reading tasks is important given that reading is a crucial language comprehension skill and a major source of L2 input (Eskey, 2005;Krashen, 1981), especially when opportunities for L2 exposure are limited in foreign language settings. Moreover, reading is an active and communicative skill that involves taking a goal-oriented and strategic approach to the text, activating relevant background knowledge, interpreting the hidden or implied message from literal information, and evaluating the author's perspectives (Grabe, 2022;Khalifa & Weir, 2009). Therefore, understanding how different task features influence L2 reading comprehension and the learning of target linguistic constructions can inform how to design and implement L2 reading tasks effectively. ...

Reading in a Second Language: Moving from Theory to Practice
  • Citing Book
  • September 2022

... itive organizers have been extensively researched as input enhancement techniques that help learners tackle complex reading challenges like concept maps (Nesbit & Adesope, 2006;Tzeng, 2010), graphic organizers (Pang, 2013;Praveen & Rajan, 2013;Rahim et al., 2017), advance organizers (Nemer & Kamal, 2018;Teng, 2022), and semantic maps (Ismael, 2021;Y. C. Pan, 2017). However, inconclusive literature was found to examine the significance of using outlines as a scaffold in reading comprehension as well as distinguishing among different types of outlines. Indeed, the large number of studies that focus on varying aspects of these COs' application to English language teaching requires particular compara ...

11 - Vocabulary and Reading Comprehension
  • Citing Article
  • September 2022