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Deep-level comprehension of science texts: the role of the reader and the text.

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Deep-level comprehension of science texts: the role of the reader and the text. / Best, Rachel M.; Rowe, Michael; Ozuru, Yasuhiro et al.
In: Topics in Language Disorders, Vol. 25, No. 1, 01.2005, p. 62-80.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Best RM, Rowe M, Ozuru Y, McNamara DS. Deep-level comprehension of science texts: the role of the reader and the text. Topics in Language Disorders. 2005 Jan;25(1):62-80.

Author

Best, Rachel M. ; Rowe, Michael ; Ozuru, Yasuhiro et al. / Deep-level comprehension of science texts: the role of the reader and the text. In: Topics in Language Disorders. 2005 ; Vol. 25, No. 1. pp. 62-80.

Bibtex

@article{49571e124963460c8bab1594cc443b39,
title = "Deep-level comprehension of science texts: the role of the reader and the text.",
abstract = "Many students from elementary school through college encounter difficulty understanding their science textbooks, regardless of whether they have language disorders. This article discusses some of the particular difficulties associated with science text comprehension and possible remedies for facilitating and enhancing comprehension of challenging expository text materials. Specifically, we focus on the difficulties associated with generating inferences needed to comprehend science texts. The successful generation of inferences is affected by factors such as students' prior knowledge and reading strategies, and the manner in which science texts are written. Many students lack the necessary prior knowledge and reading strategies to generate inferences and thus comprehend science texts only poorly. Further, science texts are typically {"}low-cohesion{"} texts, which means that they require readers to generate many inferences and fill in conceptual gaps. Remedies for overcoming comprehension difficulties include matching texts to students' knowledge level and providing explicit instruction aimed at teaching students to use reading comprehension strategies for comprehension monitoring, paraphrasing, and elaborations. The computer-supported tool iSTART (Interactive Strategy Training for Active Reading and Thinking) is introduced as a technological support to assist students and teachers in the teaching/learning enterprise.",
author = "Best, {Rachel M.} and Michael Rowe and Yasuhiro Ozuru and McNamara, {Danielle S.}",
year = "2005",
month = jan,
language = "English",
volume = "25",
pages = "62--80",
journal = "Topics in Language Disorders",
issn = "0271-8294",
publisher = "Lippincott Williams and Wilkins",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Deep-level comprehension of science texts: the role of the reader and the text.

AU - Best, Rachel M.

AU - Rowe, Michael

AU - Ozuru, Yasuhiro

AU - McNamara, Danielle S.

PY - 2005/1

Y1 - 2005/1

N2 - Many students from elementary school through college encounter difficulty understanding their science textbooks, regardless of whether they have language disorders. This article discusses some of the particular difficulties associated with science text comprehension and possible remedies for facilitating and enhancing comprehension of challenging expository text materials. Specifically, we focus on the difficulties associated with generating inferences needed to comprehend science texts. The successful generation of inferences is affected by factors such as students' prior knowledge and reading strategies, and the manner in which science texts are written. Many students lack the necessary prior knowledge and reading strategies to generate inferences and thus comprehend science texts only poorly. Further, science texts are typically "low-cohesion" texts, which means that they require readers to generate many inferences and fill in conceptual gaps. Remedies for overcoming comprehension difficulties include matching texts to students' knowledge level and providing explicit instruction aimed at teaching students to use reading comprehension strategies for comprehension monitoring, paraphrasing, and elaborations. The computer-supported tool iSTART (Interactive Strategy Training for Active Reading and Thinking) is introduced as a technological support to assist students and teachers in the teaching/learning enterprise.

AB - Many students from elementary school through college encounter difficulty understanding their science textbooks, regardless of whether they have language disorders. This article discusses some of the particular difficulties associated with science text comprehension and possible remedies for facilitating and enhancing comprehension of challenging expository text materials. Specifically, we focus on the difficulties associated with generating inferences needed to comprehend science texts. The successful generation of inferences is affected by factors such as students' prior knowledge and reading strategies, and the manner in which science texts are written. Many students lack the necessary prior knowledge and reading strategies to generate inferences and thus comprehend science texts only poorly. Further, science texts are typically "low-cohesion" texts, which means that they require readers to generate many inferences and fill in conceptual gaps. Remedies for overcoming comprehension difficulties include matching texts to students' knowledge level and providing explicit instruction aimed at teaching students to use reading comprehension strategies for comprehension monitoring, paraphrasing, and elaborations. The computer-supported tool iSTART (Interactive Strategy Training for Active Reading and Thinking) is introduced as a technological support to assist students and teachers in the teaching/learning enterprise.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 25

SP - 62

EP - 80

JO - Topics in Language Disorders

JF - Topics in Language Disorders

SN - 0271-8294

IS - 1

ER -