2015
DOI: 10.1007/s11618-015-0640-8
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Ignorieren Grundschulkinder Konnektoren? — Untersuchung einer bildungssprachlichen Komponente

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Cited by 15 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…In our study, we traced the development of the comprehension of connectives across primary school age with a newly developed and validated test instrument. Our results show that the comprehension of connectives increases from Grade 2 to Grade 4, supporting previous studies which found the comprehension of connectives to still improve after children have entered school (e.g., Dragon et al, 2015;Knoepke et al, 2017). With respect to socioeconomic and language background, we find an effect of SES on the intercept as well as on the growth of comprehension of connectives across primary school; further, language minority learners showed less proficiency in Grade 2 but comparable growth rates to monolingual German students.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
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“…In our study, we traced the development of the comprehension of connectives across primary school age with a newly developed and validated test instrument. Our results show that the comprehension of connectives increases from Grade 2 to Grade 4, supporting previous studies which found the comprehension of connectives to still improve after children have entered school (e.g., Dragon et al, 2015;Knoepke et al, 2017). With respect to socioeconomic and language background, we find an effect of SES on the intercept as well as on the growth of comprehension of connectives across primary school; further, language minority learners showed less proficiency in Grade 2 but comparable growth rates to monolingual German students.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…In particular, research findings indicate that students in primary school still show pronounced restrictions in processing negative-causal connectives. Dragon et al (2015) found German students in Grades 2 and 3 to hardly process connectives in negative-causal sentence pairs (connected, e.g., by although, despite) compared to their comprehension of positive-causal sentence pairs (connected, e.g., by therefore, thus). When confronted with a task to indicate whether sentence pairs made sense, primary school students systematically rejected negative-causal sentence pairs that were semantically coherent due to the connective and accepted negative-causal sentence pairs that were incoherent due to the connective.…”
Section: Connectives: Definition and Characteristicsmentioning
confidence: 92%
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“…Geva and Ryan (1985) showed that English speaking students from Grades 5 and 7 benefitted from connectives with regard to text comprehension to the greatest extent when the connectives were highlighted, that is, students often simply seem to read over connectives without noticing them. Similarly, Dragon, Berendes, Weinert, Heppt, and Stanat (2015) concluded that German primary school children often overlook these, too. Making students aware of connectives seems to be particularly relevant to bilingual students at least in English and German speaking contexts.…”
Section: Educational Implications and Conclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%