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Keep it simple: streamlining book illustrations improves attention and comprehension in beginning readers
Educationnpj Science of Learning

Keep it simple: streamlining book illustrations improves attention and comprehension in beginning readers

C. M. Eng, K. E. Godwin, et al.

This innovative study by Cassondra M. Eng, Karrie E. Godwin, and Anna V. Fisher reveals how extraneous illustrations in early reader storybooks can distract children and hinder comprehension. By utilizing eye-tracking technology, the research shows that a streamlined design significantly enhances literacy development for young readers. Discover how optimizing reading materials can transform learning outcomes!... show more
Abstract
This study used eye-tracking to examine whether extraneous illustration details—a common design in beginning reader storybooks—promote attentional competition and hinder learning. The study used a within-subject design with first- and second-grade children. Children (n = 60) read a story in a commercially available Standard condition and in a Streamlined condition, in which extraneous illustrations were removed while an eye-tracker recorded children's gaze shifts away from the text, fixations to extraneous illustrations, and fixations to relevant illustrations. Extraneous illustrations promoted attentional competition and hindered reading comprehension: children made more gaze shifts away from text in the Standard compared to the Streamlined condition, and reading comprehension was significantly higher in the Streamlined condition compared to the Standard condition. Importantly, fixations toward extraneous details accounted for the unique variance in reading comprehension controlling for reading proficiency and attending to relevant illustrations. Furthermore, a follow-up control experiment (n = 60) revealed that these effects did not solely stem from enhanced text saliency in the Streamlined condition and reproduced the finding of a negative relationship between fixations to extraneous details and reading comprehension. This study provides evidence that the design of reading materials can be optimized to promote literacy development in young children.
Publisher
npj Science of Learning
Published On
Sep 28, 2020
Authors
Cassondra M. Eng, Karrie E. Godwin, Anna V. Fisher
Tags
eye-trackingliteracy developmentreading comprehensionextraneous illustrationsstorybookseducation
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