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Agrawal, Rakesh; Gollapudi, Sreenivas; Kannan, Anitha; Kenthapadi, Krishnaram – Journal of Educational Data Mining, 2014
We present "study navigator," an algorithmically-generated aid for enhancing the experience of studying from electronic textbooks. The study navigator for a section of the book consists of helpful "concept references" for understanding this section. Each concept reference is a pair consisting of a concept phrase explained…
Descriptors: Electronic Publishing, Textbooks, Navigation, Hypermedia
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McEneaney, John E.; Li, Ledong; Allen, Kris; Guzniczak, Lizabeth – Journal of Literacy Research, 2009
This article reports on two studies investigating reader stance, navigation, and response in expository hypertext. Subjects in the studies included 69 and 147 adult readers prompted to adopt either an efferent or aesthetic stance when reading a 36-node expository hypertext. Reading was followed by recall and essay writing tasks. Results of the…
Descriptors: Reader Response, Hypermedia, Reading Processes, Adults
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Douglas, J. Yellowlees – Writing on the Edge, 1991
Describes the process of reading the hypertext read-only file "WOE" (included on a disk with this journal) in which voices, memories, influences, and the process of text production all converge, rejecting the objective model of reality as the great "either/or" and embracing, instead, the "and/and/and." (SR)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Hypermedia, Reader Text Relationship, Reading Processes
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Harpold, Terence – Writing on the Edge, 1991
Argues that the accidents of reading a hypertext (changing your destination, forgetting your point of departure, or getting lost along the way) are not the effects of inappropriate cues, misinterpreted reference or poor design, but the general condition of the hypertext as text, amplified by the narrative turns of the link. (SR)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Hypermedia, Reader Text Relationship, Reading Processes
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Reinking, David – Reading Teacher, 1997
Discusses technology and literacy, in particular the characteristics and qualities of hypertext. Seeks to communicate some of the experience of reading hypertext. Argues that the computer is much more than a new device for displaying textual information or for teaching children how to read and write. (SR)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Hypermedia, Literacy, Reader Text Relationship
Wright, Patricia; And Others – Technical Writing Teacher, 1990
Focuses on diagrams giving overviews of complex technical information as facilitators for adult subjects using computers to learn about the business activities of a fictitious family. Finds that features of the author's control over the reader's encounter with the diagram influences whether readers will interrupt their reading to study the…
Descriptors: Adults, Communication Research, Hypermedia, Reader Text Relationship
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Wenger, Michael J.; Payne, David G. – Technical Communication: Journal of the Society for Technical Communication, 1994
Finds that a graphical browser (a graphical representation of the structure of a hypertext document) had no effect on recall, comprehension, or recall of text structure but that it did increase the amount of text read by users and reduced the number of nodes repeated during reading. (SR)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Hypermedia, Reader Text Relationship, Reading Comprehension
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Patterson, Nancy G. – English Journal, 2000
Argues that students develop new reading strategies in order to construct meaning from electronic text. Discusses why reading electronic text is different, and argues that there is historical precedence for this shifting role of the reader. Outlines strategies for helping students reflect on the differences between hypertext and traditional text…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Electronic Text, English Instruction, Hypermedia
Young, Beth Rapp – 1996
What is pleasing about hypertext is what has always been pleasing about genre fiction: the creative process of reading. Genre novels are written to a formula--and often called formula fiction. Critics say they are written to make money and to make money only. According to C. S. Lewis, they "rot the mind." If looked at from the standpoint…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Fiction, Higher Education, Hypermedia