Authors
Yasuhiro Ozuru, Rachel Best, Courtney Bell, Amy Witherspoon, Danielle S McNamara
Publication date
2007/12/1
Journal
Cognition and Instruction
Volume
25
Issue
4
Pages
399-438
Publisher
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.
Description
This study examines how passage availability and reading comprehension question format (open-ended vs. multiple-choice) influence question answering. In two experiments, college undergraduates read an expository passage and answered open-ended and multiple-choice versions of text-based, local, and global bridging inference questions. Half the participants were allowed to refer to the passage when answering the questions and half were not. Participants' prior domain knowledge relating to the text contents was assessed using multiple-choice and open-ended questions. Correlation-based analyses in the two experiments indicated: (a) a decline in the relationship between prior domain knowledge and comprehension when the passage was available during question answering; and (b) a high correlation between multiple-choice and open-ended question answering performance when the passage was …
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