Artigo Revisado por pares

Effects of Information Search Tasks on the Comprehension of Instructional Text

2001; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 31; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1207/s15326950dp3102_03

ISSN

1532-6950

Autores

Jean‐François Rouet, Eduardo Vidal‐Abarca, Alain Bert Erboul, Victor Millogo,

Tópico(s)

Information Retrieval and Search Behavior

Resumo

Two experiments investigated the effects of information search tasks on university students' comprehension of a scientific text. In both experiments, undergraduate students read a 2,000-word introductory text on atomic models; then they searched through the text to answer a series of high-level or low-level questions. Finally, they wrote a 1-page summary of the text. In Experiment 1, high-level questions promoted a review-and-integrate search pattern, whereas low-level questions triggered a locate-and-memorize pattern. Moreover, the students tended to include information relevant to the search questions in their summaries. In Experiment 2, a structured overview (table of contents) increased the initial (presearch) study time and facilitated information localization but did not influence the summary. Again, students included question-relevant materials in their summaries. We conclude that text processing can be successfully guided toward deeper levels of comprehension by means of appropriate task settings and presentation formats.

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