“…Over the years, the reading community has continued the inquiry into main idea comprehension, directing its attention to the reader's confidence and prior knowledge (Afflerbach, 1990;Davey & Miller, 1990;Pressley, Ghatala, Pirie, & Woloshyn, 1990); the number of examples and placement of the topic sentence in the text (Beishuizen, Asscher, Prinsen, & Elshout-Mohr, 2003;Day & Zajakowski, 1991;Harp & Mayer, 1998); and strategy instruction (Jitendra, Hoppes, & Xin, 2000). Given the extreme importance of reading comprehension in learning and the central role of the main idea in reading comprehension, it is only natural to predict that research into main idea comprehension will continue until national reading levels improve and college students are capable of understanding their textbooks at the level expected by their professors.…”