Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Technology Assisted Reading Assessment “Accessible Reading Assessment” and HTML Cara Laitusis Teresa King Elizabeth Ayad Markku Hakkinen.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Technology Assisted Reading Assessment “Accessible Reading Assessment” and HTML Cara Laitusis Teresa King Elizabeth Ayad Markku Hakkinen."— Presentation transcript:

1 Technology Assisted Reading Assessment “Accessible Reading Assessment” and HTML Cara Laitusis Teresa King Elizabeth Ayad Markku Hakkinen

2 Technology Assisted Reading Assessment Materials 2 test forms (42 items each) Reading passage followed by multiple choice options. Post-test survey

3 Technology Assisted Reading Assessment Population 49 boys, 44 girls Grades 7-10 10 different states

4 Technology Assisted Reading Assessment Test Forms Form A (Maximum Accessibility) Form B (Business as Usual)

5 Technology Assisted Reading Assessment Form A (Accessible) Higher interest passages Included “context” sentence Panel of disability experts reviewed items and made suggested revisions (simplified language) Additional level of proofing for braille/large print forms Changes to formatting Two additional choices of test formats (audio, html)

6 Technology Assisted Reading Assessment Sample by Form Test Form A Test Form B Total BrailleLarge Print Braille18--18 Large Print--26 Audio (MP3)111829 HTML516 Audio+Braille10--10 Audio+Large Print--44 Total444993

7 Technology Assisted Reading Assessment

8 Mean Scores by Format FormatN Form AForm B MeanSDMeanSD Braille 1835.229.6134.838.08 Large Print 2635.588.8231.779.59 Audio 2933.287.1726.7912.22 HTML 639.673.6728.678.31 Audio+Braille 928.118.5926.1110.54 Audio+Large Print 429.509.6822.757.50

9 Technology Assisted Reading Assessment

10 Student Comments on HTML 5 students reported HTML was better –“because it is easier and faster to navigate (performing the find command made things a lot simpler unlike the braille where I had to keep browsing through many pages and numbered paragraphs)” –“because both reading the passage and answering the questions was a lot easier than the braille. I did not use the audio.” –“I could finish more quickly and understand what I was reading.” –“some was read aloud and if there was a word you could not pronounce it would pronounce it right. It was faster than I could read the braille. 1 student reported HTML was worse –“I couldn’t understand it as well”

11 Technology Assisted Reading Assessment HTML Version Followed Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) see http://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG/ http://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG/

12 Technology Assisted Reading Assessment Limitations Small sample sizes Confounding of other accessibility elements with file format


Download ppt "Technology Assisted Reading Assessment “Accessible Reading Assessment” and HTML Cara Laitusis Teresa King Elizabeth Ayad Markku Hakkinen."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google