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Harris, Karen R.; Graham, Steve – Annals of Dyslexia, 2013
By the upper elementary grades, writing becomes an essential tool both for learning and for showing what you know. Students who struggle significantly with writing are at a terrible disadvantage. Data from the National Assessment of Educational Progress indicate that only 25% of students can be classified as competent writers; students with…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Writing (Composition), Writing Processes, Writing Ability
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Graham, Steve; Harris, Karen R. – Learning Disabilities Research & Practice, 2013
This article examines the Common Core State Standards as they apply to writing and students with learning disabilities (LD). We first consider why the implementation of these standards is advantageous to writing instruction for students with LD as well as the challenges in implementing them. Next, we make the following four recommendations in…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, State Standards, Evidence, Writing (Composition)
Harris, Karen R.; Graham, Steve – 1984
The study investigated whether a self control strategy training procedure was effective in improving compositions of two 12-year-old learning disabled students. Effects of training on three objective aspects of compositions (number of different action words, action helpers, and describing words) were investigated using a multiple baseline across…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Generalization, Learning Disabilities, Self Control
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Harris, Karen R.; Graham, Steve – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1985
A self-control strategy training procedure was effective in improving two elementary learning disabled students' use of parts of speech and mean number of words per story. Additionally, stories written after training received substantially higher quality ratings than those composed during baseline. (Author/CL)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Learning Disabilities, Self Control, Self Evaluation (Individuals)
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Graham, Steve; Harris, Karen R. – Exceptional Children, 1988
Research-based recommendations for an effective writing instruction program for exceptional students include, among others, allocate a sufficient amount of instruction time; expose students to a broad range of writing tasks; integrate writing with other academic subjects; develop the processes of planning, sentence generation, and revising; and…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Learning Disabilities, Program Development
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Harris, Karen R.; Graham, Steve – Remedial and Special Education (RASE), 1993
This response to Gersten and Dimino (EC 606 357) uses a case study to illustrate how a special education teacher integrated strategy instruction into a fifth-grade classroom where a whole-language approach to writing was already in place. Instruction in story grammar is presented as a seven-stage process. (DB)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Classroom Techniques, Intermediate Grades, Learning Disabilities
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Graham, Steve; Harris, Karen R. – Exceptional Children, 1989
The study with three sixth-grade learning-disabled students found that a self-instructional strategy to facilitate the generation, framing, and planning of argumentative essays had a positive effect on the students' writing performance and self-efficacy. Effects were maintained over time and transferred to a new setting and new writing genre.…
Descriptors: Essays, Generalization, Instructional Effectiveness, Intermediate Grades
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Harris, Karen R.; And Others – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1994
Two studies, each involving four intermediate grade students with learning disabilities, examined the differential effects of attention monitoring and performance monitoring on spelling study behaviors and story writing behaviors. Both interventions had a positive impact; neither was clearly or consistently superior to the other. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attention Control, Intermediate Grades, Learning Disabilities
Graham, Steve; Harris, Karen R. – 1988
Using self-instructional strategy training procedures, three sixth-grade learning disabled students were taught a series of self-directed prompts designed to facilitate the generation, framing, and planning of written compositions. The eight-step instructional procedure included pretraining, review of baseline performance level, description of the…
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Behavior Modification, Cues, Essays
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Graham, Steve; Harris, Karen R. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1989
The viability of self-instructional strategy training was investigated in a study involving 22 learning disabled and 11 normal fifth and sixth graders. Training produced meaningful and lasting effects on composition skills and heightened the sense of self-efficacy of subjects. (TJH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Componential Analysis, Elementary School Students, Grade 5