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Guzzetti, Barbara J.; And Others – Journal of Reading, 1992
Asserts that students' inaccurate prior knowledge in science can hinder the learning process. Presents instructional strategies for elementary and secondary school students that have been proved effective by research, such as augmented activation activities, refutational text, nonrefutational text, and the discussion web. (PRA)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Processes, Prior Learning, Reading Research
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hynd, Cynthia R.; Alverman, Donna E. – Reading Research and Instruction, 1989
Examines how readers overcome their misconceptions about the principles of motion. Finds that students overcome misconceptions when their prior knowledge is activated, regardless of whether they read text that supports or refutes those misconceptions. Finds that students using several processing strategies have an advantage over students using…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Learning Processes, Misconceptions, Prior Learning
Raphael, Taffy E.; Pearson, P. David – 1982
A study assessed the effects of metacognitive training in question answering strategies on students' ability to answer postreading comprehension questions. In the first part of the study, baseline data concerning the level of metacognitive awareness exhibited by expert readers when answering questions were gathered through the use of 44 skilled…
Descriptors: Adults, Elementary Education, Learning Processes, Metacognition
Jones, Beau Fly – 1985
Defining reading as a constructive process involving an interaction of the reader, the text, and the context, this paper offers a model of student cognitive processing that incorporates research in reading, thinking, teaching, and instructional materials. The first section of the paper provides the theoretical context for developing the model,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Interaction, Knowledge Level, Learning Processes
Gordon, Christine J.; Pearson, P. David – 1983
To evaluate different strategies for improving students' comprehension skills, particularly their inference ability, 42 fifth grade students identified as good or average readers were placed into one of three groups for an eight-week instructional period. Students in one group, the Content and Structure group, received systematic attention, story…
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Cognitive Processes, Grade 5, Intermediate Grades
Mandl, Heinz; And Others – 1984
In reviewing current literature on the importance of examples in the process of teaching learning, this report takes into particular consideration textbook approaches that emphasize the role of examples for comprehension and motivation. Utilizing a constructive theory of prose comprehension, it then attempts to specify the function of examples in…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Didacticism, Educational Psychology, Instructional Design
Waller, T. Gary, Ed.; MacKinnon, G. E., Ed. – 1979
The first of a series providing reviews, syntheses (empirical and rhetorical), and reports of reading research, the chapters in this volume treat the question, "What does a child have to know (or be able to do) in order to learn to read?" The book begins with an in-depth logical analysis in historical perspective of the concept of reading…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Early Reading, Elementary Education, Learning Processes
Brown, Ann L.; And Others – 1980
Focusing on how teachers can devise instructional routines to help students learn to learn, this paper discusses mechanisms for training students to devise their own strategies for learning. Because of the dominance of deliberate memory strategies in training research, the paper begins with a brief consideration of such literature, then proceeds…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Processes, Learning Strategies
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Norris, Stephen P.; Phillips, Linda M. – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1994
Challenges the widely endorsed practice of activating relevant knowledge prior to reading. Outlines a perspectival (perspective-relative) view of reading and suggests that this view provides a means to make coherent sense of interpretations. Concludes that having specific knowledge is not the main desideratum in interpreting texts--the main…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Structures, Higher Education, Learning Processes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Bussis, Anne M.; Chittenden, Edward A. – Language Arts, 1987
Discusses two facets of the disparity between the way children learn and the way they are tested: the necessity of practice and the importance of prior knowledge. (FL)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Evaluation Criteria, Evaluation Methods, Language Acquisition
Maria, Katherine – 1985
Predicated on the assumption that many of the problems exhibited by learning disabled children arise from difficulties they have in processing information, the program of research described in this paper was undertaken to (1) identify reading comprehension difficulties that are due to disorders in the reader, and (2) design and test effective…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Learning Disabilities, Learning Processes
Purcell-Gates, Victoria – 1986
Educators suggest that children whose families have read to them during their preschool years acquire lexical and syntactic knowledge of sentence-level features typical of written narrative before they begin formal literacy instruction. To test this claim, to discern growth in this knowledge over time and experience, and to describe the lexical…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Developmental Stages, Discourse Analysis, Early Childhood Education