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Duffelmeyer, Frederick A. – Reading Teacher, 1982
Reveals that the Rauding Scale of Prose Difficulty provides results closer to Spache and Dale-Chall values than does the Singer Eyeball Estimate of Readability (SEER) technique. (FL)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Difficulty Level, Elementary Education, Readability
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Grove, C.; And Others – British Journal of Psychology, 1979
This study examines the receptive skills of severely deaf subjects employing either oral or total modes of communication in the comprehension of a wide range of syntactical and semantic structures. For almost all types of structures investigated, the total system was found to be the more effective method of communication. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Comparative Analysis, Deafness, Difficulty Level
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Barker, Douglas; Ebel, Robert L. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1982
Two forms of an undergraduate examination were constructed. Tests varied with respect to item truth value (true, false) and method of phrasing (positive, negative). Negatively stated items were more difficult but not more discriminating than positively stated items. False items were not more difficult but were more discriminating than true items.…
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Higher Education, Item Analysis, Response Style (Tests)
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Saxe, Geoffrey B.; Sicilian, Stephen – Child Development, 1981
Examined differences between five-, seven-, and nine-year-olds' ability to estimate their counting accuracy for large set sizes on tasks of three levels of counting difficulty. With increasing age, children's estimates of their counting accuracy increasingly corresponded to their actual counting accuracy. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Style
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Monte, Christopher F.; Fish, Jefferson M. – Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1980
Three "tests" of intellectual competence (vocabulary, remote associates, trigram word-making) which permit cheating were standardized by rankings of 71 college students. The three tests were found to be equidistant along the dimension of perceived difficulty. Suggestions are made for using these tasks in cheating studies. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Cheating, College Students, Difficulty Level, Higher Education
Choul, Jean-Claude – Meta, 1980
Several exercises are presented that are intended to challenge and "limber up" the translator's manipulation of words, meanings, and connotations. The exercises point up the complexity of the translating task and encourage the translator to make the most of this fact. The focus is on French and English. (MSE)
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, English, French, Imagination
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Cancelli, Anthony A.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1980
The complexity hypothesis suggests that the hierarchical arrangement of learning tasks is related to the complexity of the task. Using a definition of complexity based on an analysis of the rules governing performance on a task, the present study lent support to the hypothesis. (Author/GDC)
Descriptors: Classification, Difficulty Level, Elementary Education, Learning Theories
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Haase, Richard F.; And Others – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1979
Results of this study demonstrated that while positive occupational information alone leads to greater simplicity, negative or mixed information significantly retards the trend toward greater simplicity. Results are discussed from both theoretical and practical perspectives, especially with reference to the typical occupational information…
Descriptors: Career Counseling, Cognitive Style, Difficulty Level, Information Theory
Tyler, Sherman W.; And Others – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory, 1979
It was hypothesized that the concept of cognitive effort in memory is both useful and important. Cognitive effort was defined as the engaged proportion of limited- capacity central processing. Four experiments were conducted, and the implications and potential applications of the concept were discussed. (Author/MH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Higher Education, Memory
Krivonos, Paul D. – Southern Speech Communication Journal, 1980
Presents a study of the effects of the occupation of an individual's personal space on that individual's judgment of the invader when the invader's attitudes are known to the invadee. Also studies the effect of the difficulty of the task on the relationship between spatial orientation and interpersonal attraction. (JMF)
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Females, Interpersonal Attraction, Interpersonal Relationship
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DiStefano, Philip; Howie, Sherry – English Education, 1979
The concept of sentence weights (the assigning of numerical scores based on hierarchical modification) seems to be a more sophisticated measure for looking at syntactic complexity than the T-Unit. (DD)
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Educational Research, Higher Education, Measurement Techniques
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Paffard, Michael K. – Exercise Exchange, 1979
Presents an approach for helping students to explore the auditory level of meaning of a poem in a step-by-step manner. (TJ)
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Higher Education, Language Patterns, Language Rhythm
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Crowhurst, Marion; Piche, Gene L. – Research in the Teaching of English, 1979
Reports on a study that examined the effect of intended audience and mode of discourse on the syntactic complexity of compositions written by sixth- and tenth-graders, and that attempted to determine whether there were increases in syntactic complexity from grade 6 to grade 10 for each audience and in each mode. (DD)
Descriptors: Audiences, Difficulty Level, Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education
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Meyer, Wulf-Uwe; And Others – Journal of Research in Personality, 1976
Four experiments are presented that examine the affective and the informational explanations of risk-preference behavior. Experiments I and II provide a phenomenological analysis of the affective and informational determinants of choice behavior while Experiments III and IV investigates at what level of difficulty individuals most desire…
Descriptors: Charts, Difficulty Level, Experiments, Information Seeking
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Boykin, A. Wade – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1977
On each of 10 trials, 80 college students were presented with a different set of five anagram tasks varying in complexity. Half the subjects rated the tasks for the amount of interestingness and half for the amount of pleasantness. (Editor/RK)
Descriptors: Charts, Difficulty Level, Experimental Psychology, Problem Solving
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