中文摘要 |
This study examines readability from a discourse analysis perspective. The data for study are 15 most popular English textbooks on psychology, management and economics in Taiwan. The first study step is to key in all the units in the textbooks and measure each unit's readability via Coh-Metrix L2 Reading Index. Then the most and the least readable units are sorted out for analysis via the approach of Lautamatti (1987) and Sympson (2000), based on their indices. The goal is to analyze (1) both units' topical structure; (2) their information structure and information flow; (3) how each unit uses syntax to ground various types of information; (4) similarities or differences among the 3 least readable texts. It is found that readability is constrained by 3 variants: (1) complexity of the topical, information and syntactic structures; (2) if more global topical progression strategies are used to achieve continuity; (3) if the text's information flow fits the ''from accessible to new'' pattern and if identifying the topic requires inferencing skills and highly integrative understanding of the prior text? In terms of the impact on readability, the third variant is the strongest of all, and the first, the weakest. As a result, researchers should always prioritize the third variant, especially when it affects readability in a different direction from the other two. Last, this study agrees that the ''word overlap index'' in the Coh-Metrix L2 Reading Index is very effective in calculating a text's readability. |