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Prose | 4 |
Reading Comprehension | 4 |
Reading Rate | 4 |
Telegraphic Materials | 4 |
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College Students | 2 |
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Journal of Educational… | 1 |
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Martin, Clessen J. | 4 |
Alonso, Lou | 1 |
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Pantalion, Charles A., Jr. | 1 |
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Bassin, Carolyn B.; Martin, Clessen J. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1976
A 2,217-word news article was reduced 10 percent, 30 percent, and 50 percent by one of three reduction methods: word frequency, grammatical, and subjective. Reduction method had no effect on comprehension at the 10 percent and 30 percent reduction levels, but at the 50 percent level the subjective method produced better reading performance than…
Descriptors: College Students, Prose, Reading Comprehension, Reading Rate
Martin, Clessen J.; Pantalion, Charles A., Jr. – 1973
This study attempted to increase the reading efficiency of normal readers by developing a method of producing telegraphic prose. The subjects' (undergraduate students in psychology) rank ordered the words in each sentence of a prose passage according to the importance of the words for communicating the main sentence idea. Specific treatment…
Descriptors: College Students, Computers, Prose, Reading Comprehension
Martin, Clessen J. – 1971
A fictional story was written in three versions: (1) traditional prose of 1,620 words, (2) medium telegraphic form of 947 words, and (3) highly condensed telegraphic form of 455 words. Two hundred and ten braille readers from grades 6 to 9 were assigned to one of the three treatment versions. Nine groups were formed on the basis of comparable age,…
Descriptors: Braille, Prose, Reading Comprehension, Reading Rate
Martin, Clessen J.; Alonso, Lou – 1967
To test the assumption that conventional textbook prose contains words and word sequences unnecessary for comprehension, 210 blind children, all braille readers in grades 6, 7, 8, and 9, were divided into three groups and tested on a fictional story written in one of three different forms. Those forms included a traditional style (1620 words), a…
Descriptors: Blindness, Braille, Exceptional Child Research, Fiction