The Role of Knowledge Availability in Forming Inferences with Rural Middle Grade English Learners

Amy E Barth, Johny Daniel, Gregory Roberts, Sharon Vaughn, Marcia A Barnes, Ethan Ankrum, Heather Kincaid, Amy E Barth, Johny Daniel, Gregory Roberts, Sharon Vaughn, Marcia A Barnes, Ethan Ankrum, Heather Kincaid

Abstract

We investigated differences in knowledge-based inferencing between rural, middle grade monolingual English-speaking students and English learners. Students were introduced to facts about an imaginary planet Gan followed by a multi-episode story about Gan. Participants were tested on the accuracy of fact recall and inferences using this knowledge at three time points (i.e., immediate, one-week, and one-month follow-up). Results show that monolingual English-speaking students significantly outperformed English learners on the inference task. Both subgroups made elaborative inferences more accurately than coherence. Students' ability to recall knowledge base facts was the strongest predictor of their ability to accurately make inferences using this knowledge at each time point.

Keywords: English language learners; Inference; knowledge-base; middle school; rural.

Figures

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Figure 1
Study design.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/instance/8117408/bin/nihms-1696815-f0002.jpg

Source: PubMed

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