Genre effects on higher education students' text reading for understanding

Citation
H. Francis et S. Hallam, Genre effects on higher education students' text reading for understanding, HIGH EDUC, 39(3), 2000, pp. 279-296
Citations number
15
Categorie Soggetti
Education
Journal title
HIGHER EDUCATION
ISSN journal
00181560 → ACNP
Volume
39
Issue
3
Year of publication
2000
Pages
279 - 296
Database
ISI
SICI code
0018-1560(200004)39:3<279:GEOHES>2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
This study provides empirical support for the proposal that student learnin g in higher education is affected not only by prior subject knowledge and b y approaches to learning but also by ability to deal with text genre. It fi rst explores how 22 higher degree students on a course in education underst ood selected text extracts from different genres when reading at their own pace under conditions expected to promote thorough understanding. After rea ding a text each student wrote answers to a set of questions about their re ading and understanding of the text. In tape-recorded discussion with anoth er reader of the same text they then looked for similarities and difference s between their responses. They later reported on their feelings about the task and text. Understandings were found to vary between readers of the sam e text, difference being largely attributed by the students to difficulty w ith the language and structure of the texts in terms which pointed to the g enre. Considerable anxiety about difficulty and difference in understanding was partly allayed through discussion, but understanding was not much furt hered. Most students felt that more work on the texts would be fruitful. In a second part of the study a further 39 students from a new intake to th e same course were asked about text types in their recommended and actual c ourse reading. The types they reported as most frequently recommended were also felt to be the most difficult for reasons to do with text genre. They were also those from which the earlier text extracts had been drawn. Theore tical and practical issues are discussed.