June 1985
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176 Reads
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35 Citations
Journal of Literacy Research
The effects of prior knowledge (high, low) and oral reading accuracy (95% +, 90–94%) on miscues and comprehension were examined by requiring 57 third-grade average readers to read an expository passage orally. The children had either high prior knowledge of the topic, defined as completing a classroom instructional unit and verified by a free-association test, or low prior knowledge. Children with high prior knowledge made fewer miscues which resulted in meaning loss (p < .05), and their miscues were less graphically similar to the text word (p < .01) than children with low prior knowledge. Also, children with high prior knowledge correctly answered more comprehension questions of all types – textually explicit (p < .01), textually implicit (p < .05), and scriptally implicit (p < .001) – than children with low prior knowledge. Support for an interactive-compensatory model of reading is discussed.