The research is relatively robust on the benefits of text-to-speech for readers with impairments that might otherwise preclude equal access to text and for young readers still acquiring basic skills like phonological awareness or decoding.20 Also promising are recent innovations in text-to-speech involv- ing the translation of visual information other than text, such as pictures or tables.21
Ofra Korat has been conducting experimental studies with e-reading tools that can build both procedural skills (such as phonological
awareness and word reading) and conceptual skills and knowledge (such as vocabulary) that foster learning to read. She has found that presenting children’s books as digital text with dictionaries or activities can lead to improve- ments
in phonological awareness, word- reading skills, and vocabulary knowledge for kindergarten and first-grade readers.
22 Other studies with younger children indicate that presenting high-quality children’s books on computers
with multimedia supports, such as the text being read aloud expressively with simultaneous highlighting of the words being read, helps to improve children’s
focus on and
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