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McCrudden, Matthew T.; Magliano, Joseph P.; Schraw, Gregory – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2011
This work examined how adjunct displays influence college readers' moment-by-moment processing of text and the products of reading, using reading time (Experiments 1 & 2), and think-aloud methodologies (Experiment 3). Participants did or did not study a diagram before reading a text. Overall, the reading time data, think-aloud data, and recall…
Descriptors: Electronic Publishing, Reading Processes, Reader Text Relationship, College Students
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McCrudden, Matthew T.; Schraw, Gregory; Lehman, Stephen – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2009
We examined whether making cause and effect relationships explicit with an adjunct display improves different facets of text comprehension compared to a text only condition. In two experiments, participants read a text and then either studied a causal diagram, studied a list, or reread the text. In both experiments, readers who studied the adjunct…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Reading Comprehension, Reader Text Relationship, Visual Aids
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McCrudden, Matthew T.; Schraw, Gregory – Educational Psychology Review, 2007
This article reviews the role of relevance in text processing. It argues that relevance instructions provided by instructors and texts help readers identify text segments that are germane to a reading goal. A taxonomy of relevance instructions is presented and four basic types of relevance manipulations are considered (i.e., targeted segments,…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Models, Language Processing, Reading Instruction
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Schraw, Gregory; Bruning, Roger – Reading Research Quarterly, 1996
Examines relationships between readers' implicit models of reading processes and reader engagement. Notes that a factor analysis produced factors corresponding to a transmission model or to a transactional model. Finds that endorsing a transactional model was related to higher recall of expository text, and that individuals high on the…
Descriptors: Factor Analysis, Higher Education, Models, Reader Text Relationship
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Schraw, Gregory; Dennison, Rayne Sperling – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1994
Tests the hypothesis that different assigned purposes for reading led to changes in the "interestingness" and recall of text material. Concludes that reading for a particular purpose enhances the interestingness of text information even when that information is not intrinsically interesting. Discusses educational implications. (BS)
Descriptors: Interest Research, Reader Response, Reader Text Relationship, Reading Processes
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Schraw, Gregory; And Others – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1995
Examines the relationship among sources of interest, perceived interest, and text recall. Reveals (through factor analysis) six different sources of interest. Suggests sources of interest affect perceived interest, which in turn affects recall. Suggests that text structure appears to play an important role in perceived situational interest and,…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Reader Text Relationship, Reading Comprehension, Reading Interests
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McCrudden, Matthew; Schraw, Gregory; Hartley, Kendall; Kiewra, Kenneth – Journal of Experimental Education, 2004
This research compared high-load and low-load versions of a text by manipulating text presentation, text organization, and example context on measures of fact and concept learning. The low-load text presentation variable enhanced fact and concept learning and post-reading ease of comprehension ratings. The low-load text organization variable led…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Comparative Analysis, Text Structure, Concept Formation