The Effects of Stance and Age Level on Children's Literary Responses
Open Access
- 1 March 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Reading Behavior
- Vol. 23 (1) , 61-85
- https://doi.org/10.1080/10862969109547727
Abstract
The primary purpose of this study was to explore the effects of the use of aesthetic and efferent stances in response to literature. Subjects included 43 fourth graders, 47 sixth graders, and 40 eighth graders who were reading on-grade level or above. All subjects read the same three short stories and completed written free responses to each. Responses were analyzed for reader stance and level of understanding reached. Two-way analyses of variance revealed significant main effects for stance and grade on level of understanding for all three stories. The use of an aesthetic stance, where readers focused on the lived-through experience of the work, was associated with higher levels of personal understanding. Level of understanding was also found to increase with grade level. No interaction effects were found, indicating students' grade levels do not influence the relationship between the aesthetic stance and higher levels of personal understanding.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Effects of Writing in a Reader-Based and Text-Based Mode on Students' Understanding of Two Short StoriesJournal of Reading Behavior, 1989
- The Child's Developing Sense of Theme as a Response to LiteratureReading Research Quarterly, 1988
- The Aesthetic TransactionThe Journal of Aesthetic Education, 1986
- Convergence and Divergence in Reader Response to LiteratureReading Research Quarterly, 1986
- Interpersonal Cognitive Complexity and the Literary Response Processes of Adolescent ReadersResearch in the Teaching of English, 1985
- Viewpoints: Transaction Versusb Interaction—A Terminological Rescue OperationResearch in the Teaching of English, 1985
- Viewpoints: The Distinction between Participant and Spectator Role Language in Research and PracticeResearch in the Teaching of English, 1984
- Assuming the Spectator Stance: An Examination of the Responses of Three Young ReadersResearch in the Teaching of English, 1982
- The Implied ReaderPublished by Project MUSE ,1974