Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Children’s problems with inference making

Electronic data

  • Oakhill&Cain_5April2015

    Accepted author manuscript, 87.4 KB, Word document

    Available under license: CC BY-NC: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

  • Oakhill & Cain (2018) Children's problems with inference making

    Final published version, 759 KB, PDF document

    Available under license: CC BY-NC: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Children’s problems with inference making: Causes and consequences

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Children’s problems with inference making: Causes and consequences. / Oakhill, J.; Cain, K.
In: Bulletin of Educational Psychology, Vol. 49, No. 4, 01.06.2018, p. 683-699.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Oakhill, J & Cain, K 2018, 'Children’s problems with inference making: Causes and consequences', Bulletin of Educational Psychology, vol. 49, no. 4, pp. 683-699. https://doi.org/10.6251/BEP.201806_49(4).0008

APA

Vancouver

Oakhill J, Cain K. Children’s problems with inference making: Causes and consequences. Bulletin of Educational Psychology. 2018 Jun 1;49(4):683-699. doi: 10.6251/BEP.201806_49(4).0008

Author

Oakhill, J. ; Cain, K. / Children’s problems with inference making : Causes and consequences. In: Bulletin of Educational Psychology. 2018 ; Vol. 49, No. 4. pp. 683-699.

Bibtex

@article{19d48189fc0d4553a8806a5468b35191,
title = "Children{\textquoteright}s problems with inference making: Causes and consequences",
abstract = "Understanding a text requires not only understanding the individual words and sentences, but also requires the construction of an integrated model of the text as a whole: a Mental Model (Johnson-Laird, 1983) or Situation Model (Kintsch, 1998). In the first part of this paper, we differentiate between the types of inference that occur as a reader understands a text: necessary inferences (at both the local and global level) and {\textquoteleft}merely elaborative{\textquoteright} inferences, which might embellish the reader{\textquoteright}s understanding, but which are not essential to it. We then go on to discuss the problems of children who have a Specific Comprehension Difficulty (i.e. they are able to read words at an age-appropriate level but, nevertheless, have a poor understanding of the text overall). We describe the particular difficulties that such children have in answering inferential questions about a text, and outline the evidence that such difficulties are causally related to comprehension skill. We then discuss the reciprocal relation between vocabulary skills and inference making. Inference skills have a clear role in helping readers to derive the meanings of unknown words from text through the use of contextual cues and, conversely, deep vocabulary knowledge (what is known about words), and rapid access to that knowledge, can support inference making. {\textcopyright} 2018, National Taiwan Normal University. All rights reserved.",
keywords = "Comprehension difficulties, Inference abilities, Vocabulary depth",
author = "J. Oakhill and K. Cain",
year = "2018",
month = jun,
day = "1",
doi = "10.6251/BEP.201806_49(4).0008",
language = "English",
volume = "49",
pages = "683--699",
journal = "Bulletin of Educational Psychology",
issn = "1011-5714",
publisher = "National Taiwan Normal University",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Children’s problems with inference making

T2 - Causes and consequences

AU - Oakhill, J.

AU - Cain, K.

PY - 2018/6/1

Y1 - 2018/6/1

N2 - Understanding a text requires not only understanding the individual words and sentences, but also requires the construction of an integrated model of the text as a whole: a Mental Model (Johnson-Laird, 1983) or Situation Model (Kintsch, 1998). In the first part of this paper, we differentiate between the types of inference that occur as a reader understands a text: necessary inferences (at both the local and global level) and ‘merely elaborative’ inferences, which might embellish the reader’s understanding, but which are not essential to it. We then go on to discuss the problems of children who have a Specific Comprehension Difficulty (i.e. they are able to read words at an age-appropriate level but, nevertheless, have a poor understanding of the text overall). We describe the particular difficulties that such children have in answering inferential questions about a text, and outline the evidence that such difficulties are causally related to comprehension skill. We then discuss the reciprocal relation between vocabulary skills and inference making. Inference skills have a clear role in helping readers to derive the meanings of unknown words from text through the use of contextual cues and, conversely, deep vocabulary knowledge (what is known about words), and rapid access to that knowledge, can support inference making. © 2018, National Taiwan Normal University. All rights reserved.

AB - Understanding a text requires not only understanding the individual words and sentences, but also requires the construction of an integrated model of the text as a whole: a Mental Model (Johnson-Laird, 1983) or Situation Model (Kintsch, 1998). In the first part of this paper, we differentiate between the types of inference that occur as a reader understands a text: necessary inferences (at both the local and global level) and ‘merely elaborative’ inferences, which might embellish the reader’s understanding, but which are not essential to it. We then go on to discuss the problems of children who have a Specific Comprehension Difficulty (i.e. they are able to read words at an age-appropriate level but, nevertheless, have a poor understanding of the text overall). We describe the particular difficulties that such children have in answering inferential questions about a text, and outline the evidence that such difficulties are causally related to comprehension skill. We then discuss the reciprocal relation between vocabulary skills and inference making. Inference skills have a clear role in helping readers to derive the meanings of unknown words from text through the use of contextual cues and, conversely, deep vocabulary knowledge (what is known about words), and rapid access to that knowledge, can support inference making. © 2018, National Taiwan Normal University. All rights reserved.

KW - Comprehension difficulties

KW - Inference abilities

KW - Vocabulary depth

U2 - 10.6251/BEP.201806_49(4).0008

DO - 10.6251/BEP.201806_49(4).0008

M3 - Journal article

VL - 49

SP - 683

EP - 699

JO - Bulletin of Educational Psychology

JF - Bulletin of Educational Psychology

SN - 1011-5714

IS - 4

ER -