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Langer, Judith A. – 1981
Research into the reading process has shaped an understanding of how readers "make meaning" when they are engaged in a reading activity. This research has highlighted a learning triad--the reader, the text, and the context (or learning environment)--that interactively affects the manner in which the student will comprehend a particular…
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Cognitive Processes, Elementary Secondary Education, Reading Comprehension
Levin, Joel R. – 1981
Most popular strategies, including illustrations, for improving prose processing consist of procedures that force attention either to the text's macrostructure or to the organization and interconnections of its propositions. These strategies are assumed to enhance students' comprehension of the text as encoded, as well as to afford students an…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Illustrations, Learning Theories, Long Term Memory
Bartlett, B. J.; And Others – 1980
A study assessed whether young readers might be induced to use a memory strategy. Subjects were an intact class of 25 fifth grade students taught to use text structure as an organizational strategy, and 29 students in a second class who received no instructional intervention. On three occasions, the 54 students were required to read a test…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Grade 5, Intermediate Grades, Memory
Bowman, Margie; Gambrell, Linda – 1981
A study investigated the effectiveness of a story structure questioning strategy upon the reading comprehension of sixth grade students. An alternate questioning strategy was used as a comparison treatment, and involved more traditional literal, interpretative, and problem solving questions. On the basis of reading level scores, 100 students were…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Grade 6, Intermediate Grades, Metacognition
Ortony, Andrew – 1978
Hitherto, theories of similarity have restricted themselves to judgments of what might be called literal similarity. A central thesis of this paper is that a complete account of similarity needs also to be sensitive to nonliteralness, or metaphoricity, an aspect of similarity statements that is most evident in similes, but that actually underlies…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Classification, Cognitive Processes, Communication (Thought Transfer)
Dilena, Mike – 1977
Suggesting that the ability to identify words depends as much on contextual information available when one is reading for meaning as on decoding skills, this paper challenges traditional, mechanistic skills approaches to reading instruction. In addition, it contends that comprehending (relating written material to what one already knows) is a…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Cognitive Processes, Context Clues, Decoding (Reading)
Reynolds, Ralph E.; Ortony, Andrew – 1980
A total of 411 elementary school children seven to twelve years old read short prose passages and selected the most appropriate continuation sentence from four alternatives. The completion sentences were constructed so that the correct (target) response involved either an explicit (simile) or an implicit (metaphor) metaphorical comparison. It was…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis, Elementary Education, Figurative Language
Dungan, Rebecca Kirschenman – 1978
Forty-eight first grade students participated in a three-fold study to (1) examine the effect of repeated exposure to text on memory for prose as determined through retelling, (2) determine how low and high comprehending students performed on this task, and (3) determine if males would perform as well as females on the task. The subjects were…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Grade 1, Memory, Primary Education
Baker, Linda – 1979
This paper is intended as an introduction to the concept of comprehension monitoring, which is an important component of reading and involves evaluating and regulating one's ongoing comprehension processes. A discussion of research that investigated comprehension monitoring with both children and adults is presented and the implications for…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Critical Reading, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
Tager-Flusberg, Helen B. – 1979
Three studies were conducted with three groups of eighteen autistic children (3-11 years old) matched by age and IQ to developmental aphasic Ss to examine the nature of the cognitive deficit underlying autism. Two experiments were concerned with language comprehension using real and anomalous sentences, while the third investigation was an…
Descriptors: Autism, Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
Guszak, Frank J. – 1968
Reading lessons were observed, taped, and analyzed to determine how teachers' questioning strategies contribute to students' ability to comprehend materials read. The kinds of thinking elicited by teachers' questions were investigated by means of a classification scheme developed which included recognition, recall, translation, conjecture,…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes, Creative Thinking, Critical Thinking
Edwards, Barbara Ann – 1976
This study investigated a psycholinguistic model of reading comprehension which attempts to relate readers' conceptual backgrounds to their ability to process syntactic structures. Specifically, the questions addressed involved the interaction between cognitive organizers and active and passive voices of verbs. Subjects included 409 third graders,…
Descriptors: Advance Organizers, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Doctoral Dissertations
Sinatra, Richard; Annacone, Dominic – 1978
Over the years, teacher questions have consistently aimed at literal comprehension, indicating that teachers lack understanding of the reading-thinking-questioning hierarchy. Benjamin Bloom's "Cognitive Taxonomy" can serve as a hierarchical framework for the design of questions. Within this framework, a teacher can confront decision…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Decision Making, Elementary Secondary Education
Weiner, Cheryl J. – 1978
Based on the assumption that the active involvement of the reader is required to give meaning to the printed word, a study was devised to test whether reading comprehension can be increased if students are taught to formulate questions about what they read. The study had three phases: a pilot study during which fifth grade top readers were…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary School Students, Intermediate Grades, Questioning Techniques
Hayes-Roth, Barbara – 1977
Cued-recall and two-alternative, forced-choice recognition measures were used to evaluate subjects' retention of the specific wordings of studied texts. Results obtained after 10-minute and 24 hour retention intervals suggest that the studied wordings of texts are functional components of their memory representations. Theories that assume…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Learning Processes, Memory
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