Lezen en antwoorden bij teksten met vragen: Een cross-sectionele eye-trackstudie onder 52 vwo-leerlingen ; Reading texts, answering questions: a cross-sectional eye-tracking study among preacademic students

In Dutch education one often uses 'texts with questions' to train reading skills: students study a text in advance and then answer questions, while the text is still available. In this eye-tracking study reading processes of eighth grade (n = 17), tenth grade (n = 16) and twelfth grade (n = 19) preacademic students within this task were observed. It was investigated how younger and older preacademic students (N = 52) differ in their reading and answering processes and how initial text reading influences answering. Results: twelfth graders read texts initially faster than eighth graders, but no... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Rooijackers, P.J.H.
van Silfhout, G.
Schuurs, U.
Mulders, I.C.M.C.
van den Bergh, H.H.
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2020
Schlagwörter: tekstbegrip / schoolvak Nederlands / eye-tracking / vwo / tekst met vragen / text comprehension / preacademic / school subject Dutch / text with questions
Sprache: Niederländisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29039532
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/408663

In Dutch education one often uses 'texts with questions' to train reading skills: students study a text in advance and then answer questions, while the text is still available. In this eye-tracking study reading processes of eighth grade (n = 17), tenth grade (n = 16) and twelfth grade (n = 19) preacademic students within this task were observed. It was investigated how younger and older preacademic students (N = 52) differ in their reading and answering processes and how initial text reading influences answering. Results: twelfth graders read texts initially faster than eighth graders, but not faster than tenth graders. Participants generally showed few signs of strategic reading. In the answering process older students knew better where to locate answers in the text and answered more questions correctly than younger students.