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| Background
Knowledge, Linguistic Complexity, and Second-Language Reading Comprehension
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Mienke
Droop
Ludo Verhoeven
University of
Nijmegen |
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In
the present study, the role of cultural background knowledge on the
reading comprehension of third graders acquiring literacy in Dutch
as a first and second language is examined while the children read
noncontrived texts from the reading curricula. Children were given
three types of texts: texts referring to Dutch culture, texts referring
to the cultures of immigrants from Near Eastern countries (i.e., Turkey
and Morocco), and neutral texts. Within each type of text, a distinction
was made between two levels of linguistic complexity. By means of
reading-aloud protocols, retelling and questioning the children’s
reading performance on the distinguished types of texts was analyzed.
A facilitating effect of cultural familiarity was found for both reading
comprehension and reading efficiency. For the minority children, this
effect was restricted to linguistically simple texts, because of their
limited knowledge of the target language, Dutch. |
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JLR
v.
30 no. 2
1998
pp. 253–271 |
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