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Volume 31, Issue 6: December, 2004
Abstract
Increasing Readers’ Comprehension of Health Education
Brochures: A Qualitative Study Into How Professional Writers
Make Texts Coherent
Marieke Kools, MA, Robert A. C. Ruiter, PhD, Margaretha W.
J. van de Wiel, PhD, Gerjo Kok, PhD
The aim of this study was to gain insight into the extent
to which health education text writers apply writing principles
derived from cognitive psychological theory. Seventeen professional
text writers of health education materials participated in
a qualitative study, consisting of a rewriting task combined
with a think-aloud procedure and a semistructured interview.
The verbal data were explored carefully in light of seven
text coherence principles that have proven effective in cognitive
psychological research to increase text comprehension. Findings
indicate text writers vary in their ideas and use of coherence
principles to make a text comprehensible. It is argued that
the health education profession can benefit greatly from knowledge
about cognitive text processing and cognitive coherence principles
for realizing effective comprehension of written health education
messages.
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