Title of article
Why do delayed summaries improve metacomprehension accuracy?
Author/Authors
Anderson، نويسنده , , Mary C.M. and Thiede، نويسنده , , Keith W.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
9
From page
110
To page
118
Abstract
We showed that metacomprehension accuracy improved when participants (N = 87 college students) wrote summaries of texts prior to judging their comprehension; however, accuracy only improved when summaries were written after a delay, not when written immediately after reading. We evaluated two hypotheses proposed to account for this delayed-summarization effect (the accessibility hypothesis and the situation model hypothesis). The data suggest that participants based metacomprehension judgments more on the gist of texts when they generated summaries after a delay; whereas, they based judgments more on details when they generated summaries immediately after reading. Focusing on information relevant to the situation model of a text (the gist of a text) produced higher levels of metacomprehension accuracy, which is consistent with situation model hypothesis.
Keywords
Metacomprehension , Metacognition , self-regulated learning
Journal title
Acta Psychologica
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Acta Psychologica
Record number
1903969
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