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Yussen, Steven R.; And Others – 1979
Two experiments were conducted to examine children's understanding (metacognitive awareness) of the parts to a simple story. The following parts were considered essential for comprehending a story: what precipitates the character's action (initiating event), what the character did (action), and what followed the character's action (consequence).…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Content Area Reading, Developmental Stages
Chodos, Laura; Mosenthal, Peter – 1977
Thirty-four fourth-grade students participated in a study of the way in which children acquire frameworks used to recall and encode stories. The study tested the hypotheses that children have a consistent preference for a story structure node in which they identify narrative events as comprising plausible story themes, that the framework generated…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Content Area Reading, Elementary Education, Grade 4
Mason, Jana M. – 1982
Unproven beliefs about the process of reading and its instruction and about the effects of maturation and social structure on learning have obscured the question of what children know about how to read. An alternate conceptualization proposes that to learn to read children must obtain experience in three reading contexts: the use of print and its…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Early Reading, Learning Readiness, Learning Theories
Pace, Ann Jaffe – 1979
Sensitivity to story information that conflicted with expectations was examined in kindergarten, second, fourth, and sixth grade children. The children either read or listened to stories about familiar events. One story was consistent with children's "scripts" for these events, while the other story contained script-inconsistent information. All…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Expectation
van den Broek, Paul – 1987
This study investigated the development of students' abilities to integrate information in stories as an aspect of reading comprehension. Students aged 8, 11, 14, and 18 judged the importance of key statements, which varied in their causal relations within an episode, between episodes, and in a higher-order structure, yielding three levels of…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Adolescents, Age Differences, Children
Harlin, Rebecca P. – 1984
A study examined prereaders' story processing strategies by assessing their performance on tasks that tapped their ability to (1) use story grammar and role playing, (2) retell a wordless picture book, (3) read a predictable book, (4) retell an oral story, (5) sequence pictured story events, and (6) fingerpoint-read a nursery rhyme. Parent…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Early Childhood Education, Early Reading
Hale, Catherine; Windecker, Elizabeth – 1992
To gather information on the relationship of parent behavior during reading situations to preschool children's cognitive ability, a study of 12 female and 9 male preschool children and their parents was undertaken. Children were administered a battery of tests that measured intelligence, creativity, perceived self-competence, and language skills.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Development, Creativity, Family Influence
Furniss, Elaine R. – 1983
To determine how children develop schema for text that include increasing sensitivity to text types, text categories, orthographic conventions in words, conventional story beginnings and endings, and text cohesive ties, a study examined the writing of four kindergarten children. The kindergarten had adopted a process-conference approach to writing…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Child Development, Classroom Communication, Classroom Observation Techniques