ESL students’ online and offline reading strategies: scrolling, clicking, flipping and reading / Izyani Mohamad Zaki, Fauziah Hassan and Abu Bakar Mohamed Razali

In this borderless world, computers and the Internet have become important tools of communication and learning and they have also become an important part of our lives. The opportunity to seek information through the computer has made reading an important language skill. Despite the importance of re...

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Main Authors: Mohamad Zaki, Izyani, Hassan, Fauziah, Mohamed Razali, Abu Bakar
Format: Article
Published: ACRULeT, Faculty of Education & UiTM Press 2008
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Online Access:http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/357/
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Institution: Universiti Teknologi Mara
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spelling my.uitm.ir.3572017-12-27T07:30:14Z http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/357/ ESL students’ online and offline reading strategies: scrolling, clicking, flipping and reading / Izyani Mohamad Zaki, Fauziah Hassan and Abu Bakar Mohamed Razali Mohamad Zaki, Izyani Hassan, Fauziah Mohamed Razali, Abu Bakar Malaysia In this borderless world, computers and the Internet have become important tools of communication and learning and they have also become an important part of our lives. The opportunity to seek information through the computer has made reading an important language skill. Despite the importance of reading and technology, little research to date has been carried out to compare the reading strategies employed by readers when reading online compared to offline. Such studies are important because awareness of the similarities and differences on the strategies employed between these two modes of learning will enable teachers to help develop students’ reading ability. Hence, this study investigates if there is a difference between online and offline strategies used by second language readers. The participants in this study were ESL undergraduates at a university in Malaysia. The instrument employed was the Survey of Reading Strategies (SORS) (Sheorey and Mokhtari, 2001) and Online Survey of Register Strategies (OSORS) by Anderson (2003). These questionnaires tap three different types of information: global reading strategies, problem solving strategies, and support strategies. The results of the study are discussed in terms of their pedagogical implications in the L2 classroom. ACRULeT, Faculty of Education & UiTM Press 2008-12 Article PeerReviewed Mohamad Zaki, Izyani and Hassan, Fauziah and Mohamed Razali, Abu Bakar (2008) ESL students’ online and offline reading strategies: scrolling, clicking, flipping and reading / Izyani Mohamad Zaki, Fauziah Hassan and Abu Bakar Mohamed Razali. Asian Journal of University Education (AJUE), 4 (2). pp. 61-78. ISSN 1823-7797
institution Universiti Teknologi Mara
building Tun Abdul Razak Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Mara
content_source UiTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.uitm.edu.my/
topic Malaysia
spellingShingle Malaysia
Mohamad Zaki, Izyani
Hassan, Fauziah
Mohamed Razali, Abu Bakar
ESL students’ online and offline reading strategies: scrolling, clicking, flipping and reading / Izyani Mohamad Zaki, Fauziah Hassan and Abu Bakar Mohamed Razali
description In this borderless world, computers and the Internet have become important tools of communication and learning and they have also become an important part of our lives. The opportunity to seek information through the computer has made reading an important language skill. Despite the importance of reading and technology, little research to date has been carried out to compare the reading strategies employed by readers when reading online compared to offline. Such studies are important because awareness of the similarities and differences on the strategies employed between these two modes of learning will enable teachers to help develop students’ reading ability. Hence, this study investigates if there is a difference between online and offline strategies used by second language readers. The participants in this study were ESL undergraduates at a university in Malaysia. The instrument employed was the Survey of Reading Strategies (SORS) (Sheorey and Mokhtari, 2001) and Online Survey of Register Strategies (OSORS) by Anderson (2003). These questionnaires tap three different types of information: global reading strategies, problem solving strategies, and support strategies. The results of the study are discussed in terms of their pedagogical implications in the L2 classroom.
format Article
author Mohamad Zaki, Izyani
Hassan, Fauziah
Mohamed Razali, Abu Bakar
author_facet Mohamad Zaki, Izyani
Hassan, Fauziah
Mohamed Razali, Abu Bakar
author_sort Mohamad Zaki, Izyani
title ESL students’ online and offline reading strategies: scrolling, clicking, flipping and reading / Izyani Mohamad Zaki, Fauziah Hassan and Abu Bakar Mohamed Razali
title_short ESL students’ online and offline reading strategies: scrolling, clicking, flipping and reading / Izyani Mohamad Zaki, Fauziah Hassan and Abu Bakar Mohamed Razali
title_full ESL students’ online and offline reading strategies: scrolling, clicking, flipping and reading / Izyani Mohamad Zaki, Fauziah Hassan and Abu Bakar Mohamed Razali
title_fullStr ESL students’ online and offline reading strategies: scrolling, clicking, flipping and reading / Izyani Mohamad Zaki, Fauziah Hassan and Abu Bakar Mohamed Razali
title_full_unstemmed ESL students’ online and offline reading strategies: scrolling, clicking, flipping and reading / Izyani Mohamad Zaki, Fauziah Hassan and Abu Bakar Mohamed Razali
title_sort esl students’ online and offline reading strategies: scrolling, clicking, flipping and reading / izyani mohamad zaki, fauziah hassan and abu bakar mohamed razali
publisher ACRULeT, Faculty of Education & UiTM Press
publishDate 2008
url http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/357/
_version_ 1685648053046870016