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Christie, Daniel J.; Schumacher, Gary M. – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1978
This study sought to determine if age-related increases in memory for prose are, in part, due to deliberate mnemonic strategies and if older children use the high order relations in prose more efficiently than younger children. (HOD)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education

Rice, G. Elizabeth – Educational Gerontology, 1986
Examined reading habits and activities which may require skills used in prose recall tasks as they occurred in everyday lives of young (N=18), middle-aged (N=18), and older (N=18) adults who kept structured diaries. Everyday activities and reading habits were related to daily life requirements. Pattern of activities was influenced by current…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Diaries, Life Style
Rice, G. Elizabeth; Meyer, Bonnie J. F. – 1986
A study examined the connection between the everyday activities of adults of different ages and their performance on a prose recall task. Subjects were 54 adults, 18 in each of three age groups (18-32, 40-54, and over 62). Written recall of two 388-word expository prose passages was used for the prose recall measure. For the activities measures,…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Learning Activities, Older Adults
Story Structure and Age Effects on Children's Ability to Sequence Stories. Technical Report No. 122.
McClure, Erica; Mason, Jana – 1979
To investigate the strategies children use in comprehending written stories, third, sixth, and ninth grade students were given scrambled six-sentence stories and asked to reorder them. Three versions of each of six stories were created. The first version was the canonical form of the story predicted by story grammar rules; the second version began…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Deep Structure, Discourse Analysis, Elementary Secondary Education