Children's Comprehension and Local-to-Global Recall of Narrative and Expository Texts

We examined underlying mechanisms for comprehension differences across expository and narrative text while controlling for factors confounded in the extant literature. Fourth grade students (n=32) read both an expository and a narrative text, and completed both a local comprehension assessment, and...

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Main Authors: Fernando Romero, Scott G. Paris, Sarah Brem
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2015-05-01
Series:Current Issues in Education
Online Access:https://cie.asu.edu/ojs/index.php/cieatasu/article/view/1651
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spelling doaj-64a6fcd585004dc492fe12eed82fa4ed2021-09-02T17:36:47ZengArizona State UniversityCurrent Issues in Education1099-839X2015-05-018Children's Comprehension and Local-to-Global Recall of Narrative and Expository TextsFernando Romero0Scott G. Paris1Sarah Brem2Arizona State UniversityUniversity of MichiganArizona State University We examined underlying mechanisms for comprehension differences across expository and narrative text while controlling for factors confounded in the extant literature. Fourth grade students (n=32) read both an expository and a narrative text, and completed both a local comprehension assessment, and a global retelling assessment for each text. Children recalled more information from narrative than expository texts in the global processing task, but there was no difference in the local processing task. Our findings are consistent with psycholinguistic studies on the formation of mental models from text, and suggest that narrative structure may facilitate memory for global information even when local comprehension of exposition and narrative is equivalent. https://cie.asu.edu/ojs/index.php/cieatasu/article/view/1651
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fernando Romero
Scott G. Paris
Sarah Brem
spellingShingle Fernando Romero
Scott G. Paris
Sarah Brem
Children's Comprehension and Local-to-Global Recall of Narrative and Expository Texts
Current Issues in Education
author_facet Fernando Romero
Scott G. Paris
Sarah Brem
author_sort Fernando Romero
title Children's Comprehension and Local-to-Global Recall of Narrative and Expository Texts
title_short Children's Comprehension and Local-to-Global Recall of Narrative and Expository Texts
title_full Children's Comprehension and Local-to-Global Recall of Narrative and Expository Texts
title_fullStr Children's Comprehension and Local-to-Global Recall of Narrative and Expository Texts
title_full_unstemmed Children's Comprehension and Local-to-Global Recall of Narrative and Expository Texts
title_sort children's comprehension and local-to-global recall of narrative and expository texts
publisher Arizona State University
series Current Issues in Education
issn 1099-839X
publishDate 2015-05-01
description We examined underlying mechanisms for comprehension differences across expository and narrative text while controlling for factors confounded in the extant literature. Fourth grade students (n=32) read both an expository and a narrative text, and completed both a local comprehension assessment, and a global retelling assessment for each text. Children recalled more information from narrative than expository texts in the global processing task, but there was no difference in the local processing task. Our findings are consistent with psycholinguistic studies on the formation of mental models from text, and suggest that narrative structure may facilitate memory for global information even when local comprehension of exposition and narrative is equivalent.
url https://cie.asu.edu/ojs/index.php/cieatasu/article/view/1651
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