The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.

Original Article

Local text cohesion, reading ability and individual science aspirations: key factors influencing comprehension in science classes

Sophie S. Hall

Corresponding Author

University of Leicester, , UK

Corresponding author. University of Leicester, Henry Wellcome Building, School of Psychology, Lancaster Road, Leicester, LE1 9HN, UK. Email:

sophie.hall@dmu.ac.uk

Search for more papers by this author
Ruth Filik

University of Nottingham, , UK

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 24 February 2014
Cited by: 5

Abstract

In response to the concern of the need to improve the scientific skills of school children, this study investigated the influence of text design (in terms of text cohesion) and individual differences, with the aim of identifying pathways to improving science education in early secondary school (Key Stage 3). One hundred and four secondary school children (56 females, 48 males), aged 12–13 years took part in the study. To assess the influence of local cohesion (lexical and grammatical links between adjacent sentences) in science texts, we measured students' comprehension (through multiple choice questions) of science text that was high and low in local cohesion. To explore the role of individual differences, students completed tests to measure general reading ability, general intelligence, facets of conscientiousness, science self‐concept and individual, friends and family aspirations in science. Students were more accurate in answering comprehension questions after reading text that was high in cohesion than low in cohesion, suggesting that high local text cohesion improved students' comprehension of science text. Reading ability predicted increased comprehension for both text designs. Individual aspirations in science accounted for unique variance for comprehension for high cohesion text. Implications for the teaching of secondary school science are discussed.

Number of times cited: 5

  • , Does the accuracy matter? Accurate concept map feedback helps students improve the cohesion of their explanations, Educational Technology Research and Development, (2018).
  • , How Text Presentation and Financial Literacy Affect Pension Communication Success, International Journal of Business Communication, (232948841774829), (2017).
  • , Comprehension of narratives, non-fiction, and complex syntax as predictors of science achievement, Speech, Language and Hearing, 19, 4, (203), (2016).
  • , Key skills for science learning: the importance of text cohesion and reading ability, Educational Psychology, 36, 2, (191), (2016).
  • , Analyse der Aufgaben zur Evaluation der Bildungsstandards in Physik - Differenzierung von schriftsprachlichen Fähigkeiten und Fachlichkeit, Zeitschrift für Erziehungswissenschaft, 18, 4, (763), (2015).