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Document Description
Title
A
study
of
inferencing
activities
in
selected
basal
series
at the
primary
level
in
Canadian
schools
Author
Major
,
Maureen
Mary.
Description
Thesis
(M.Ed.)
--
Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1986.
Education
Date
1986.
Pagination
ix, 115 leaves.
Subject
Basal
reading
instruction;
Inference;
Readers
(Primary);
Reading
comprehension;
Degree
M.Ed.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Faculty of Education
Discipline
Education
Language
Eng
Notes
Bibliography
:
leaves
105-113.
Abstract
The
purpose
of this
study
was to
examine
the
three
most
commonly
used
basal
reading
series
for the
primary
in
Canadian
schools
to
identify:
(i)
whether
inference
is
prescribed
for
teaching?
(ii)
if
so
, to what
extent?
and
(iii)
what
methodologies
are
utilized.
A
survey
of the
Department
of
Education
for
each
province
and
territory
revealed
the
most
widely
used
programs
were
Expressways
by
Gage
(1977);
Starting
Points
in
Language
Arts
by
Ginn
(1977);
and
Language
Development
Reading
by
Nelson
(1977).
Teachers'
manuals
,
student
reader
texts
and
student
workbooks
for
each
series
were
examined
to
determine
the
frequency
of
reference
to the
process
of
inference
, to the
use
of
pre
and
post-reading
questions
, and to the
nature
of the
inference-making
activities.
Inferential
questions
required
children
to
integrate
background
knowledge
and
text
information
to
derive
plausible
inferences
,
whereas
non-inferential
questions
required
children
to
locate
explicit
information
from the
text.
Analyses
revealed
that
inference
is
prescribed
for
instruction
mainly
through
the
use
of
pre
and
post-reading
questions
and
inference-making
activities.
An
overview
of the
results
are as
follows.
The
Gage
series
presented
10
pre-reading
questions
,
2516
post-reading
questions
of
which
1105
(43.9%)
were
inferential.
It
provided
19
inference-making
activities.
The
Ginn
series
presented
pre-reading
questions
and
encouraged
children
to
formulate
pre-reading
questions
for
each
basal
selection.
Post-reading
questions
totalled
3191
of
which
914
(28.6%)
were
inferential.
It
provided
54
inference-making
activities.
The
Nelson
series
presented
pre-reading
questions
for
approximately
fifty
percent
of the
basal
selections.
Post-reading
questions
totalled
1492
of
which
354
(23.7%)
were
inferential.
It
also
included
57
inference-making
activities.
There were
many
examples
throughout
the
three
basal
series
where
teacher
guidelines
designed
to
develop
children's
inferencing
abilities
were
unclear.
These
findings
justify
the
following
conclusions.
First
, the
amount
of
pre
and
post-reading
questions
as
well
as the
number
of
inferencing
activities
provided
in these
three
series
is
consistent
with what has been
reported
for
American
basal
series.
This
means
that the
Canadian
basal
series
also
appears
to be
weak
in the
important
reading
process
of
inference.
Second
,
non-inferential
questions
take
precedence
over
inferential
questions
in
terms
of the
total
questions
asked
in the
teaching
manuals.
Third
,
guidelines
to
teachers
, if and
when
provided
, are
often
vague
,
sketchy
and
misleading.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
75399013
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(16.27
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Major_MaureenMary.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
319892.cpd