Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
352621 Contemporary Educational Psychology 2015 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Eye movement modeling examples (EMME) display the eye movements of a model.•These eye movements were shown to 7th graders to model their reading of an illustrated text.•Observing these eye movements supported integrative processing of text and picture.•EMME also supported recall and transfer of new knowledge.•Relationship between integrative processing and transfer was greater in the EMME condition.

Integrative processing of verbal and graphical information is crucial when students read an illustrated text to learn from it. This study examines the potential of a novel approach to support the processing of text and graphics. We used eye movement modeling example (EMME) in the school context to model students' integrative processes of verbal and pictorial information by replaying a model's gazes while reading an illustrated text on a topic different from that of the learning episode. Forty-two 7th graders were randomly assigned to an experimental (EMME) or a control condition (No-EMME) and were asked to read an illustrated science text about the food chain. Online measures of text processing and offline measures of reading outcomes were used. Eye-movement indices indicated that students in the EMME condition showed more integrative processing than students in the No-EMME condition. They also performed better than the latter in the verbal and graphical recall, and in the transfer task. Finally, the relationship between the duration of reprocessing the graphical segments while rereading the correspondent verbal segments and transfer performance was stronger in the EMME condition, after controlling for the individual differences of prior knowledge, reading comprehension, and achievement in science. Overall, the findings suggest the potential of eye-tracking methodology as an instruction tool.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Applied Psychology
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