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GATES, ARTHUR I.; AND OTHERS – 1965
THE FULL TEXTS OF INVITATIONAL ADDRESSES GIVEN AT THE 1965 INTERNATIONAL READING ASSOCIATION (IRA) CONVENTION IN DETROIT, MICHIGAN, BY SIX RECIPIENTS OF IRA CITATION AWARDS ARE PRESENTED. GATES SUGGESTS STEPS IRA SHOULD TAKE TO REVIVE AND REDIRECT READING RESEARCH. MCCALLISTER DISCUSSES THE IMPLICATIONS OF THE CHANGING AND EXPANDING VOCABULARY OF…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged Youth, Perception, Reading Development, Reading Improvement
Gates, Arthur I.; And Others – 1965
The full texts of invitational addresses given at the 1965 International Reading Association (IRA) Convention in Detroit, Michigan, by six recipients of IRA citation awards are presented. Gates suggests steps IRA should take to revive and redirect reading research. McCallister discusses the implications of the changing and expanding vocabulary of…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged Youth, Perception, Reading Development, Reading Improvement
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Marcel, Tony – Visible Language, 1978
Reports the findings of experiments that suggest that much of perception, even to high interpretive levels, is automatic and independent of intention or consciousness, and that the production of words in reading may involve problems that have nothing to do with articulation, even if the words have been identified. (GT)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Perception, Reading Instruction, Reading Processes
Goodman, Kenneth S. – Nat Sch, 1969
From a special report, "What's New in Curriculum."
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Linguistics, Perception, Phonics
Venezky, Richard L. – 1972
The preliterate child must acquire from reading instruction at least the following skills: (a) appropriate scanning behavior, (b) letter and word recognition, (c) letter-sound generalizations, and (d) comprehension of written materials, at least to the degree that the reader can comprehend the same message when received aurally. Almost all modern…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Perception, Reading, Reading Ability
Standiford, Sally N. – 1984
Intended for administrators and policymakers as well as teachers, this digest explores the nature of students' metacomprehension, or their awareness of their own understanding, and the implications of this awareness for reading instruction. After defining metacomprehension, the digest discusses why this awareness is important to the learning…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Processes, Perception
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Holbrook, Hilary Taylor – Journal of Reading, 1986
Examines some recent ERIC materials on comprehension processes and on how teachers can improve students' awareness of comprehension or metacomprehension. (HOD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Content Area Reading, Perception, Reading Comprehension
Lederer, Debra – 1978
Fundamental to any critical reading process is the ability of the child to recognize and identify assumptions concerning the world in which he or she lives and brings to the printed page. The unconscious and implicit understandings that a reader and an author hold can fill the slots of developing schemata and become embedded and subsumed in…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation
Beery, Althea – 1968
The methods of reading instruction used and the emphasis given reading within the total elementary school program depend on the attitudes of the school administrators and the teaching personnel. While reading is commonly defined as a decoding process, it is actually a complex process of word recognition, comprehension, critical or evaluative…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Critical Reading, Environmental Influences, Interpretive Reading
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Cullingford, Cedric – Reading, 1979
Shows that the ability to impose a distinct and exact meaning on what is seen underlies the skills involved in reading; notes the importance of training in perception combined with a clear sense of the purpose of reading. (GT)
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Early Childhood Education, Language Skills, Orthographic Symbols
Gregg, Lee W.; Farnham-Diggory, Sylvia – 1976
A framework for a comprehensive theory of reading is presented in this paper. The framework consists of perceptual, semantic, and control systems. The perceptual and semantic spaces of the theory should not be confused with the terms "decoding" and "comprehension"; decoding and comprehension refer to ways in which those spaces…
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Beginning Reading, Cognitive Processes, Conference Reports
Herrmann, Beth Ann; And Others – 1985
A study was conducted to explore whether explicit teacher explanation techniques could be effective with severely disabled readers in clinical settings. The subjects were three teachers enrolled in a five-week supervised clinical practicum that emphasized continuous diagnosis of disabled readers and the planning and implementation of 54 hours of…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Individualized Instruction, Learning Disabilities, Perception
Skapof, Jerome – 1975
The purpose of this study was to judge the viability of an operational approach aimed at assessing response styles in reading using the hypothesis of sensory hierarchical organization. A sample of 103 middle-class children from a New York City public school, between the ages of five and seven, took part in a three phase experiment. Phase one…
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Beginning Reading, Doctoral Dissertations, Dyslexia
Mustico, Thomas W. – 1970
Relationships existing between elements of intelligence, age, and environment and meaningfulness of materials were examined along with the hypothesis that an increase in meaningfulness of materials would cause the mean difference in learning scores for different intelligence levels to first increase, then decrease. In a paired-associate task,…
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Beginning Reading, College Students, Elementary School Students
Fagan, Edward R. – 1982
Reading in the writing classroom can be defined as a cluster of arbitrary categories, each with its own effect on the reading/writing process. Given this definition, it can be said that (1) perceptions significantly affect both reading and writing, (2) attitudes are factors in reading and writing, (3) rhetorical triangles are useful in teaching…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Integrated Activities, Perception, Reading Achievement