6533b821fe1ef96bd127ac0a

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Impact of question-answering tasks on search processes and reading comprehension

Laura GilRamiro GilabertEduardo Vidal-abarcaTomás Sola MartínezRaquel Cerdán

subject

RecallMultimediamedia_common.quotation_subjectComputer-Assisted InstructionDelayed recallcomputer.software_genreEducationText comprehensionComprehensionReading comprehensionReading (process)Developmental and Educational PsychologyQuestion answeringPsychologycomputermedia_commonCognitive psychology

description

Abstract This study examined the effect of (a) high- and low-level questions and (b) reading the text before the questions asked on performance, delayed text recall, and deep text comprehension, as well as on specific text-inspection patterns. Participants were 37 undergraduate students who answered either high- or low-level questions using the software Read&Answer to read and answer questions on the computer screen. Additionally, half of the sample read first a text and then answered the questions (reading-first condition), whereas the other half answered the questions without having read the text in advance (no-reading-first condition). All participants had the text available to search for the answer. Results indicated that high-level questions facilitated deep comprehension but not immediate performance or delayed recall of text, independently of the reading condition, and that high- and low-level questions differentially affected text-inspection patterns.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.learninstruc.2007.12.003