Mary Lynn Taft’s research while affiliated with Marquette University and other places

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Publications (1)


Table 2
The Effects of Prior Knowledge and Oral Reading Accuracy on Miscues and Comprehension
  • Article
  • Full-text available

June 1985

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176 Reads

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35 Citations

Journal of Literacy Research

Mary Lynn Taft

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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.

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Citations (1)


... Therefore, the model in Figure 1 was developed to serve this purpose. On the other hand, a review of the literature shows very few studies directly investigating the effect of prior knowledge on reading errors (Priebe, Keenan, & Miller, 2012;Taft & Leslie, 1985). From this point of view, the second aim of the research is to reveal the effect of the students' prior knowledge on reading errors. ...

Reference:

The Effects of Prior Knowledge, Reading Errors and Word Recognition Skills on Reading Comprehension
The Effects of Prior Knowledge and Oral Reading Accuracy on Miscues and Comprehension

Journal of Literacy Research