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Clark, Charles H.; Farley, Frank H. – 1973
This experiment investigated the assumption that children's learning and retention of prose material can be differentially affected by varying discrepancy from expectation (as established by an advance organizer). It was hypothesized that a passage which differed significantly from expectation would produce heightened arousal, which should in turn…
Descriptors: Children, Memory, Prose, Reading Comprehension
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Levin, Joel R.; And Others – American Educational Research Journal, 1983
Eighth-grade students were given short prose passages that described the distinguishing attributes of fictitious towns. Illustrations were devised to represent the attributes, either separately, thematically, or thematically in conjunction with the mnemonic keyword method. Keyword illustrations proved to be highly effective facilitators of…
Descriptors: Illustrations, Junior High Schools, Learning Strategies, Memory
Niles, Jerome A.; And Others – 1978
A study examined the effects of within domain processing on the recall of idea units as well as the potential reversals in performance resulting from the passing of time. Subjects for the experiment were 89 undergraduate students randomly assigned to six conditions related to target words in a reading passage: counting e's, determining the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Memory, Prose
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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
Goetz, Ernest T. – 1977
Two studies investigated whether variations in the importance of inferences and the salience of premises within a text would affect the probability that the inference would be made. Six stories of about 500 words were used, with eight variations of each story. The target inference, and its plausibility, was constant across all versions. Inference…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Memory, Prose, Reading Comprehension
Burton, John K.; And Others – 1981
"Levels of processing" is an explanatory framework postulating that differences in memory processing quality or effort affect the duration of the memory trace. Using recall (immediate, one week, or two week) for connected discourse processed under three semantic and three orthographic interference conditions, as well as a noninterference…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Language Processing, Learning Theories, Memory
Pearson, Gregory – 1977
A propositional network system for representing the logical and semantic information contained in a text is described. The reliability of scoring information recalled from reading, using this representational system, is found to vary with the scoring goal. Determination of the amount of information recalled is found to be extremely reliable. A…
Descriptors: Computer Programs, Learning Processes, Logic, Memory
Potts, George R. – 1975
The present series of experiments was designed to examine the factors affecting the ability of people to draw inferences from a passage of text. It was found that, using a true-false recognition test, proportion correct was higher and reaction time shorter on inferred information than on information that was actually presented. This was the case…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Learning Processes, Memory, Prose
Spiro, Rand J.; Esposito, Joseph – 1977
The hypothesis that pragmatic inferences presented in text are taken for granted, superficially processed, and not stably or enduringly represented in memory was investigated. Stories were read which in some conditions contained information vitiating the implicational force of explicit inferences. The vitiating information was presented either…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Memory, Prose
Christie, Daniel J.; Schumacher, Gary M. – 1975
The purpose of this study was to isolate factors responsible for the discrepant results reported in the advanced organizer literature, and to identify processes children employ when attempting to recall connected verbal materials. The subjects were 64 middle-class children randomly selected from a local school system. An equal number of male and…
Descriptors: Advance Organizers, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education
Spiro, Rand J. – 1975
A reconstructive approach to memory for connected discourse is contrasted with orientations that emphasize passive reproduction. Conditions under which reconstructive errors in recall should occur are specified. Most conventional experiments do not satisfy the conditions. In an experiment involving 360 college students, subjects were induced not…
Descriptors: College Students, Connected Discourse, Context Clues, Learning Processes
Annis, Linda; Davis, J. Kent – 1977
Field-independent and field-dependent college students studied a 1525-word article under a preferred or nonpreferred study condition (read only, underline, or note taking). Half of the subjects reviewed the material prior to an examination and half did not. Results indicated that field-independent subjects who used a nonpreferred study technique…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Higher Education, Learning Processes, Memory
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Reynolds, Ralph E.; Schwartz, Robert M. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1983
Context-dependent metaphoric sentences of literally equivalent paraphrases were used as concluding statements for short didactic passages to investigate whether metaphors help or hinder prose comprehension. Adult participants' recall protocols indicated increased memorability for passages with metaphoric conclusions. (Author/LC)
Descriptors: Adults, Cues, Figurative Language, Incidental Learning
Tenenbaum, Arlene Bonnie – 1977
The effect of variations in the organization of information and in contextual features upon comprehension of prose was tested using four tasks. Organization was varied to contrast hierarchical information structures and list information structures, and to test the effect of linking the structural components of the passage into a conceptual…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Memory, Organization, Performance Factors
Smith, Delia Gimenez-Cuervo – 1976
This study investigated the effect on learning of the interspersing of questions with sections of written discourse. A 5,200-word passage was divided into seven sections, from each of which several completion questions were derived. A pair of questions was inserted before, after, or both before and after the section. These questions also formed an…
Descriptors: Advance Organizers, Doctoral Dissertations, Higher Education, Learning Processes
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