“…Rather than treating background knowledge solely as a construct-irrelevant nuisance, it also can be seen as an opportunity to improve the interpretation of reading scores and to model good practice. Like key theories of reading (e.g., construction-integration [Kintsch, 1998] (Adams, Bell, & Perfetti, 1995;Alexander, Sperl, Buehl, & Chiu, 2004;Cromley & Azevedo, 2007;Dochy, Segers, & Buehl, 1999;Fincher-Kiefer, Post, Greene, & Voss, 1988;Hambrick & Engle, 2002;McNamara, 1997McNamara, , 2001McNamara, de Vega, & O'Reilly, 2007;McNamara, Kintsch, Songer, & Kintsch, 1996;Murphy & Alexander, 2002;O'Reilly & McNamara, 2007a, 2007bOzuru, Best, Bell, Witherspoon, & McNamara, 2007;Ozuru, Dempsey, & McNamara, 2009;Recht & Leslie, 1988;Schneider, Körkel, & Weinert, 1989;Shapiro, 2004;Spilich, Vesonder, Chiesi, & Voss, 1979;Thompson & Zamboanga, 2004;van den Broek, 2012;Voss & Silfies, 1996;Walker, 1987). While background knowledge can facilitate comprehension, in some cases background knowledge can actually interfere with reading comprehension when knowledge is irrelevant or violated by the text (Kucer, 2011).…”