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Gold, Janet T. – 1981
An understanding of an author's structure of ideas assists readers in comprehending a text. Three kinds of writing activities relate to a reading comprehension subskill. (1) sequencing--the logical presentation of events, times, places, ideas or steps in a procedure to accomplish a task or to comprehend an event--for which a teaching progression…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Integrated Activities, Prediction, Reading Comprehension

Lange, Dale L.; And Others – CALICO Journal, 1985
Presents the rationale behind a model for the use of the computer in the development of reading comprehension. Basic assumptions concerning reading are delineated. The model has three basic components: intake (text processing and text comprehension), personalization, and extension. (Author/SED)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, French, German, Higher Education
Cardinale, Loretta A. – 1991
This study explored the enhancement of comprehension of expository text by three specific types of embedded explication--etymological, causal, and analogical--together with momentum effects from sequencing. Four factors were examined: (1) the experimental effects of presenting the section of the script containing explications of new terms before…
Descriptors: Analogy, Analysis of Variance, Etymology, Expository Writing
Buss, Ray R.; And Others – 1981
Recent research has shown that when individuals hear an impoverished, atypical, or disorganized story and are asked to recall it, they can and do produce a canonical version of it. To determine if this "strategic" manipulation of story structure undergoes developmental changes, two experiments were conducted using second and sixth grade children…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Developmental Stages, Elementary Secondary Education