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Original Article

Effects of different ways of introducing a reading task on intrinsic motivation and comprehension

Ivar Bråten

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: ivar.braten@ped.uio.no

University of Oslo, , Norway

Address for correspondence: Ivar Bråten, Department of Educational Research, University of Oslo, P.O. Box 1092 Blindern, N‐0317 Oslo, Norway. E‐mail:

ivar.braten@ped.uio.no

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First published: 27 April 2015
Cited by: 1

Abstract

This study compared the effects of two brief prereading instructional practices – hands‐on activities and prior knowledge activation – on sixth‐graders' intrinsic motivation for reading a text and reading comprehension. Both hands‐on activities and prior knowledge activation substantially improved reading comprehension relative to a control condition where students just read to answer questions and take a test about the text content. These effects did not depend on preexisting individual differences in basic reading skill, reading motivation or topic knowledge. Hands‐on activities and prior knowledge activation did not differentially affect reading comprehension, however, nor did either of them have any effect on intrinsic motivation to read the text. If used regularly in classrooms, brief prereading practices in the form of hands‐on activities or prior knowledge activation may result in knowledge gains that accumulate to build a solid conceptual basis for further, self‐regulated learning from text.

Number of times cited: 1

  • , Learning with multiple online texts as part of scientific inquiry in the classroom, Computers & Education, 10.1016/j.compedu.2018.09.004, 128, (36-51), (2019).