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Hansol Lee Publishes in English Teaching: Practice & Critique

5/7/2017

 
Lee, H. & Lee, J. H. (2017 May). Reassessment of sentence combining and decombining: The effects of sentence manipulation activities on reading comprehension, English Teaching: Practice & Critique, 16(1). doi: 10.1108/ETPC-05-2016-0064

Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to examine the effects of sentence combining (SC) and sentence decombining (SD) activities on fostering reading comprehension. As a widely used writing activity for enhancing syntactic fluency in English Language Arts (ELA) classes, SC requires learners to combine short sentences into longer and more complex sentences, while SD requires learners to break down a long sentence into the shortest grammatically allowable sentences. This study assessed the effects of SD and SC in comparison with a control group on the improvement of reading comprehension ability among college students learning English as their second language (L2) in the context of a 6-week English language learning program. Participants with overall intermediate English language proficiency were randomly assigned to one of three different conditions: SC, SD, and control. Also, a subset of the participants were interviewed after the intervention. The results showed that SD was more effective than SC or control condition in enhancing syntactic knowledge and reading comprehension, as measured by a standardized English proficiency test. Data obtained from post-study interviews further suggested that only SD was perceived by the participants as having enhanced their reading comprehension. The present study provides a valuable addition to a body of research on sentence manipulation activities in ELA classes to date. For those L2 learners who have passed a pre-intermediate threshold level, SD appears to be more beneficial than SC in enhancing syntactic knowledge, which in turn appears to contribute to better reading comprehension.

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