The effect of knowing the main İdea of a text on answering multiple-choice questions which look for the details of the text
Künye
Merrikhi, P. (2013). The effect of knowing the main İdea of a text on answering multiple-choice questions which look for the details of the text. Anadolu Journal of Educational Sciences International (AJESI), 3 (1), 67-77.Özet
This paper describes a classroom research with two groups of high school students to clarify the
effect of knowing the main of a text (here, the name of a story) on answering multiple-choice
questions which look for details. The two groups read the same story with an appropriate level of
difficulty which was suitable for their level of English proficiency. The only difference between their
stories was that one of them had the name of the story above it and the other did not have. Each
group then took a reading comprehension test and their mean scores were compared. The findings
suggest that the group of students who read the story with the name of it above did not excel the
group who read the same story without its name when answering to questions looking for minute
aspects of the story. This lack of excellence shows that knowing the main idea of a text does not
play an important role in answering reading comprehension questions which look for details of a
text. The results suggest more research in this realm and also the need for instruction on
answering reading comprehension texts.