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Yandell, John – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2012
What does reading look like? Can learning to read be reduced to the acquisition of a set of isolable skills, or proficiency in reading be equated with the independence of the solitary, silent reader of prose fiction? These conceptions of reading and reading development, which figure strongly in educational policy, may appear to be simple common…
Descriptors: Reading Habits, Reading Strategies, Literacy, Reading Skills
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Anderson, Rosemary – Literacy, 2009
This article discusses the identities that may be constructed by upper primary aged pupils during silent reading sessions. The findings presented are taken from a 2-year ethnographic case study, which investigated how four dyslexic pupils, aged 10-11 (Y5-6), coped with the classroom reading they encountered at a large primary school in northern…
Descriptors: Silent Reading, Foreign Countries, Literacy, Elementary School Students
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Johnson, Sandra – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 1982
Children aged 7 to 9 were tested for their recall after hearing, orally reading, and silently reading comparable stories. Boys exhibited very poor recall performance after silent reading compared with their recall after listening and after oral reading. Girls showed comparable recall performance across all three language reception modes.…
Descriptors: Children, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries, Listening
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Pumfrey, Peter D.; Lee, Joyce – Journal of Research in Reading, 1982
Compares the reading comprehension and accuracy and listening comprehension of West Indian and English children living in England and having equivalent intellectual abilities. Finds no significant differences between the cultural groups. (FL)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Elementary Education, Ethnic Groups, Foreign Countries
Chapman, L. John – 1986
To develop a new model of the reading process, a longitudinal study investigated the importance of the concepts of cohesion and register (fiction or nonfiction) in the assessment of text readability. Subjects, 436 8-year-olds (Cohort A), 474 10-year-olds (Cohort B), and 445 13-year-olds (Cohort C) from 23 urban and rural British schools--most of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cohesion (Written Composition), Elementary Secondary Education, Fiction