Description:
In this study we examined the effects of self-questioning on students’ interpretation and appreciationof complex short stories. Two experiments were carried out, in which tenth grade students fromdifferent secondary schools participated. In Experiment 1 self-questioning instruction was compared toinstructor-made questions about stories. In Experiment 2 two forms of self-questioning instruction werecompared: an unguided and a guided form. Literature discussions in peer groups formed a substantial partof all conditions.Results showed that (unguided) self-questioning had a positive effect on students’ appreciation of literarystories, compared to instructor-prepared questions and to guided self-questioning. The results for qualityof interpretation were more diffuse. In Experiment 1 effects on students’ story interpretation could not beestablished. In Experiment 2 a main effect on story interpretation was found for both the guided and unguidedform of self-questioning instruction. In addition, students’ reading experience appeared to beimportant for the effectiveness of the unguided self-questioning condition: avid readers tended to benefitmore from this condition than infrequent readers. We conclude that an open literature approach, based on‘authentic’ student-generated questions in response to short stories, can be beneficial for students’ storyinterpretation and appreciation.