Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
364848 Learning and Individual Differences 2012 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

Topic interest and learning from texts have been found to be positively associated with each other. However, the reason for this positive association is not well understood. The purpose of this study is to examine a cognitive process, inference generation, that could explain the positive association between interest and learning from texts. In Study 1, sixty undergraduate students participated by reading two science texts, which differed in coherence levels, silently. The results replicated previous findings that topic interest is positively associated with recall and accurate answers to comprehension questions for both texts. In Study 2, sixty-nine undergraduate students participated by reading the same two science texts while thinking aloud. The results indicated that topic interest was positively associated with inference generation while reading for the more coherently-written text. Subsequent analyses indicated inference generation partly explained the positive association between topic interest and accurate answers to comprehension questions for the more coherently-written text. The findings from Study 2 were independent of the effects of reading comprehension skill. Theoretical implications of the findings, in regard to standards of coherence and depth of processing while reading, are discussed.

► The relation between topic interest and inference generation were examined. ► Topic interest and inference generation were positively associated for one article. ► Inferences partly mediated association between topic interest and post-test scores. ► Inference generation was not a mediator between topic interest and text recall. ► Study 2 results were independent of reading comprehension skill.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
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