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Donlan, Dan – Journal of Reading, 1980
Presents a three-stage process for teaching the logical relationships that exist in paragraphs to aid high school students in differentiating main ideas from subordinate statements. (MKM)
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Discourse Analysis, History Textbooks, Paragraphs
Swenson, Ingrid; Kulhavy, Raymond – 1973
The purposes of this study were to replicate the effects of question placement, either before or after, on the acquisition of critical and incidental material with grade school subjects and to determine the effects of paragraph length on learning with children. Two variables, question placement (BA) and pacing (PL), were combined in a 2 x 4…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Learning, Memory

Lorch, Elizabeth Pugzles; Lorch, Robert F., Jr. – 1984
One hundred thirty-nine college students participated in an experiment designed to examine the basis of their abilities to make relative importance distinctions among ideas in a text while reading. Subjects read two texts of 13 paragraphs each. The topics of the two texts were unrelated, but their topic structure was similar. For each of the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Higher Education, Language Processing
Coley, Joan Develin – 1982
Highlighting similarities in the processes of reading and writing can help teachers establish a more unified program allowing students to develop skills that transfer from one process to another. One activity to help students develop reading skills focuses on the "who, what, where, when" types of patterns that recur in sentences and…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Elementary Education, Integrated Activities, Language Patterns