Rp. Carver, PERCENTAGE OF UNKNOWN VOCABULARY WORDS IN TEXT AS A FUNCTION OF THE RELATIVE DIFFICULTY OF THE TEXT - IMPLICATIONS FOR INSTRUCTION, Journal of reading behavior, 26(4), 1994, pp. 413-437
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Psychology, Educational","Education & Educational Research
The relationship between the relative difficulty of passages and the n
umber of unknown words in passages was investigated. In Study I, 219 s
tudents in Grades 3, 4, 5, and 6 were given 100-word passages sampled
from textbooks and library books (trade books) and then asked to under
line each word that they did not know. In Study II, 60 graduate studen
ts were given a similar task involving 120 passages at the following l
evels of difficulty: junior high, senior high, college, and graduate s
chool. Relative difficulty (or relative easiness) was determined from
the difference between a measure of the reading ability of the student
in grade equivalent (GE) units and a measure of the difficulty level
of the material in GE units. The results from both Study I and Study I
I can be summarized as follows: (a) when the material is relatively ea
sy then close to 0% will be unknown basic words, (b) when the material
is relatively hard, then 2% or more will be unknown basic words, and
(c) when the difficulty of the material is matched closely to the abil
ity of the reader, then around 1% will be unknown basic words. These f
indings do not support the theory that free reading results in large v
ocabulary growth because free reading is likely to involve relatively
easy material that contains few, if any, unknown words. Indeed, these
findings call into question the practice of devoting large amounts of
classroom time to free reading if the purpose is to increase vocabular
y or reading level.