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Peer reviewedCarlson, Jerry S.; Jensen, C. Mark – Intelligence, 1982
Reaction time and movement time were negatively and moderately-to-strongly correlated with Ravens matrices performance and with reading comprehension and performance on the California Test of Basic Skills for 20 ninth-grade girls. Weaker relationships were found for mathematics and English grades, although the direction was consistently negative.…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Processes, Correlation, Females
Peer reviewedCheek, Earl H., Jr.; Cheek, Martha Collins – Reading World, 1983
Reports on research that reviewed 142 current middle and secondary school content materials to discover the organizational patterns used in each. Concludes that four such patterns are commonly used: enumeration, relationship, persuasive, and problem solving. Discusses each pattern and how it affects comprehension. (FL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Content Analysis, Content Area Reading, Discourse Analysis
Peer reviewedDuffy, Thomas M.; Kabance, Paula – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1982
The present findings imply that a readability formula is not an effective writing production criterion, even when the writer does not deliberately write to the formula. Comprehensibility of text might be better controlled through the proper use of the transformer concept (MacDonald-Ross and Waller). (Author/PN)
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Processes, Content Analysis, Difficulty Level
Peer reviewedWeaver, Phyllis A.; Dickinson, David K. – Discourse Processes, 1982
Examines the story recall of normal and dyslexic readers in relation to story grammar categories and suggests that dyslexic students do not have significant deficiencies in use of such categories. Discusses the results in light of the need for considering multiple processing levels and as indicating that story grammars may be of limited diagnostic…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Dyslexia, Elementary Secondary Education, Reading Comprehension
Peer reviewedGoelman, Hillel – Discourse Processes, 1982
Concludes that children could attend to texts selectively when reading or listening to expository prose, and when reading, but not in listening to narrative prose. (FL)
Descriptors: Attention Span, Cognitive Processes, Connected Discourse, Discourse Analysis
Peer reviewedCrowell, Doris C.; Hu-pei Au, Kathryn – Elementary School Journal, 1981
Shows how a scale of questions can be used to develop and assess children's ability to comprehend information presented through different modalities and media. The scale's five levels, which indicate increasing difficulty in comprehension, are association, classification, seriation, integration, and extension. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
Peer reviewedVaughan, Joseph L., Jr. – Journal of Reading, 1982
Describes a method to improve student comprehension of content area materials that involves three distinct readings, each followed by a progressively more detailed graphic overview of the content. (HTH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Content Area Reading, Discourse Analysis, Learning Theories
Peer reviewedFrase, Lawrence T.; Schwartz, Barry J. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1979
In five experiments, adults verified sentences by reading complex information in several technical passages. Both segmenting and indenting influenced performance; however, once a text had been meaningfully segmented, the addition of indentation cues did not affect response time. Implications for typographic design--line length and margins--are…
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Learning
Peer reviewedGrabe, Mark D. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1979
Two experiments investigated the impact of a reader's perspective on prose learning: (1) subjects read stories from one of two directed perspectives or with no directed perspective; or (2) readers organized and familiarized themselves with a perspective before the perspective was applied to a story. Perspective influenced recall and organization.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Conceptual Schemes, Higher Education, Perspective Taking
Peer reviewedBackman, Jarl – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 1980
Three experiments (which used adults and 14-year-old children) studied the congruence between textual input at encoding and output in the form of memory reproductions. Results verified a very close correspondence between encoding and retrieval regarding hierarchically structural operations on the information in simple stories. (AN)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adults, Cognitive Measurement, Cognitive Objectives
Graesser, Arthur C.; And Others – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1979
A schema-based framework for representing knowledge and prose organization was studied. Testing of a script pointer and tag hypothesis confirmed that memory discrimination is better for atypical actions in a passage than for typical script actions and that there is no memory discrimination for very typical actions. (SW)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis, Language Research, Learning Theories
Peer reviewedCraig, Madge T.; Yore, Larry D. – Journal of Research and Development in Education, 1996
This study examined middle school students' reported awareness of strategic approaches they used when they had difficulty reading science text. Student responses indicated that they used text and social context to resolve comprehension difficulties but that they were largely unaware of the use of prior knowledge for the same purpose. (SM)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Content Area Reading, Intermediate Grades, Junior High Schools
Peer reviewedRaphael, Taffy E.; Englert, Carol Sue – Reading Teacher, 1990
Describes the Cognitive Strategy Instruction in Writing (CSIW) program by discussing: (1) knowledge bases that are useful for expository writing and reading; (2) features of instruction inherent in CSIW that help build knowledge for successful writing and reading; and (3) the effect of CSIW on students' expository writing and reading. (MG)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Expository Writing, Reading Comprehension
Peer reviewedDavis, Kathleen A.; Walls, Richard T. – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1989
Investigates retrieval and reporting of superordinate and subordinate concepts in oral or written recollections. Finds no differences in total number of superordinate, subordinate, or reader-generated ideas recalled; however, does find differences between oral and written recall, depending on initial or ending position of text information. (RS)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Communication Research, Comparative Analysis, Discourse Analysis
Peer reviewedBell, Laura C.; Perfetti, Charles A. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1994
Highly skilled and less skilled college readers (n=29) were compared on several information-processing and language-comprehension tasks that tap cognitive components of reading. Results confirm that both areas distinguish skilled and less skilled readers and suggest that reading ability is a continuous function. (SLD)
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Processes, College Students, Comparative Analysis


