Metacognitive awareness of reading strategies among EFL high school students in China / Li Yang
Readers’ metacognitive awareness of reading strategies has always been the interest of L2 reading research (Zhang, 2001). This study reported an investigation of 118 Chinese EFL students’ metacognitive awareness of reading strategies and the relationship between metacognitive awareness and actual...
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Format: | Thesis |
Published: |
2016
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Online Access: | http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/6806/1/li_yang.pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/6806/ |
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Institution: | Universiti Malaya |
Summary: | Readers’ metacognitive awareness of reading strategies has always been the interest
of L2 reading research (Zhang, 2001). This study reported an investigation of 118 Chinese
EFL students’ metacognitive awareness of reading strategies and the relationship between
metacognitive awareness and actual reading performance. Data was collected through the
Survey of Reading Strategies (SORS) and one internal reading exam. The findings
showed that students’ overall metacognitive awareness of reading strategies was at a
moderate level with the highest level on problem-solving strategies, followed by global
strategies and support strategies. Students from high English proficiency group reported
considerably higher metacognitive awareness in global and problem-solving strategies
compared with the students from intermediate and low proficiency groups, which
provided the evidence that readers’ metacognitive awareness of reading strategies was
related to their English language proficiency. Further investigation revealed that the
metacognitive awareness of reading strategies as measured by SORS was positively
associated with students’ actual reading performance, accounting for 23% of the variance
in English reading performance. Analysis of individual factors showed that global
strategy was a significant predictor of reading performance. The findings of this study
also showed a possible way for English reading instructors to assess readers’
metacognitive awareness of reading strategies, so that they can better interpret readers’
learning needs and design suitable strategy-based reading curriculum.” |
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