A study of the cloze procedure with native and non-native speakers of English
Date
1978Author
Alderson, John Charles
Metadata
Abstract
This study examined. various aspects of the methodology of the
cloze procedure to determine their effect on the nature of close tests.
It was hypothesised. that changes in the frequency of word deletion, in
the difficulty of the original text and in the procedure used. to judge
acceptable restorations of the deleted word would produce significantly
different close tests and would result in varying correlations with
measures of English proficiency.
Three texts were selected and each was subjected to the deletion
of every sixth, eighth, tenth and. twelfth word, to give twelve
close tests. Five procedures were developed to score the responses to
these tests for the degree of similarity they showed to the deleted. words.
The tests were administered. to 360 adolescent native speakers
of English and. 360 adult non-native speakers of English who were pursuing
further studies in Britain.
It was found that significant differences existed among close
tests when deletion frequency was changed, but that se scoring procedures
reduced. this effect, The change in deletion frequency had. no
effect on the measurement of text difficulty, but significant interactions
were observed, among the three experimental variables. Different
cloze tests gave unpredictably different measures of English proficiency.
A study of identical deletions showed. that no increase in the predictability
of deleted word was gained. by increasing context from five words
to eleven words.
Since the quantity of context had no effect on predictability,
it was suggested. that cloze is essentially sentence-bound.. The nature
of the correlations of cloze with measures of English proficiency and
the results of factor analyses suggested that cloze is a better test of
syntax and lexis than of higher—order reading abilities. Implications
for future use of the doze procedure are presented and suggestions
made for further research.