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Derryberry, W. Pitt; Wininger, Steven R. – Teaching Educational Psychology, 2008
This study examined relationships between students' use of their text and motivational constructs linked to self-regulation: need for cognition, goal orientation, and self-determination. Participants were 234 Educational Psychology students. In the Fall semester students were assigned one of two textbooks whereas in the Spring they were allowed to…
Descriptors: College Students, Textbooks, Educational Psychology, Goal Orientation
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Reynolds, Michael; Besner, Derek – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2008
Recent evidence suggests that the processes responsible for generating a phonological code from print are flexible in skilled readers. An important goal, therefore, is to identify the conditions that lead to changes in how a phonological code is computed. Five experiments are reported that examine whether phonological processes change as predicted…
Descriptors: Phonology, Reading Processes, Reading Instruction, Cognitive Processes
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Feifer, Steven G. – Psychology in the Schools, 2008
This article integrates the fundamental components of both "Response to Intervention" (RTI) and cognitive neuropsychology when identifying reading disorders in children. Both proponents of RTI and cognitive neuropsychology agree the "discrepancy model" is not a reliable or valid method to identify learning disorders in school. In addition, both…
Descriptors: Reading Difficulties, Intervention, Educational Change, Reading Instruction
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Linderholm, Tracy; Zhao, Qin – Learning and Individual Differences, 2008
Working-memory capacity, strategy instruction, and timing of estimates were investigated for their effects on absolute monitoring accuracy, which is the difference between estimated and actual reading comprehension test performance. Participants read two expository texts under one of two randomly assigned reading strategy instruction conditions…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Reading Strategies, Memory, Reading Tests
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de Jong, Christien G. W.; Van De Voorde, Severine; Roeyers, Herbert; Raymaekers, Ruth; Oosterlaan, Jaap; Sergeant, Joseph A. – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2009
The nature of the comorbidity between Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and Reading Disability (RD) was examined using a double dissociation design. Children were between 8 and 12 years of age and entered into four groups: ADHD only (n = 24), ADHD+RD (n = 29), RD only (n = 41) and normal controls (n = 26). In total, 120 children…
Descriptors: Hyperactivity, Inhibition, Short Term Memory, Language Processing
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Jones, Jennifer L.; Lucker, Jay; Zalewski, Christopher; Brewer, Carmen; Drayna, Dennis – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2009
We identified individuals with deficits in musical pitch recognition by screening a large random population using the Distorted Tunes Test (DTT), and enrolled individuals who had DTT scores in the lowest 10th percentile, classified as tune deaf. We examined phonological processing abilities in 35 tune deaf and 34 normal control individuals. Eight…
Descriptors: Music, Phonemic Awareness, Therapy, Phonology
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Ehren, Barbara J. – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 2009
Purpose: This commentary is a personal reaction to A. G. Kamhi's (2007) article on the "narrow view" of reading and his suggestion that this view be adopted as a way to address the reading problems of children and adolescents. Method: In this article, I consider the narrow view of reading from an adolescent literacy perspective and discuss the…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Speech Language Pathology, Teaching Methods, Reading Processes
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Rah, Anne; Adone, Dany – Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 2010
This article presents new evidence from offline and online processing of garden-path sentences that are ambiguous between reduced relative clause resolution and main verb resolution. The participants of this study are intermediate and advanced German learners of English who have learned the language in a nonimmersed context. The results show that…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Sentences, Verbs, Figurative Language
National Assessment Governing Board, 2012
As the ongoing national indicator of what American students know and can do, the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) in Reading regularly collects achievement information on representative samples of students in grades 4, 8, and 12. Through The Nation's Report Card, the NAEP Reading Assessment reports how well students perform in…
Descriptors: Reading Achievement, National Competency Tests, Reading Comprehension, Grade 4
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Konheim-Kalkstein, Yasmine L.; van den Broek, Paul – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2008
This study examines the effect of incentives, a motivational manipulation, on cognitive processes of reading. Extrinsic motivation was manipulated through the use of monetary incentives to assess its effect on information processing in reading. One group of college students was paid for what they remembered from several narrative passages they…
Descriptors: College Students, Incentives, Reading Achievement, Student Motivation
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Law, Yin-Kum – Journal of Research in Reading, 2008
This study investigated how constructive activities are involved when Chinese students are performing reading tasks that require deeper levels of understanding. Forty students from Grade 5 (19 boys and 21 girls), and 42 students from Grade 6 (20 boys and 22 girls) participated in this study. To reveal the children's constructive processes in…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Protocol Analysis, Grade 6, Grade 5
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Scheepers, Christoph; Keller, Frank; Lapata, Mirella – Cognitive Psychology, 2008
Metonymic verbs like "start" or "enjoy" often occur with artifact-denoting complements (e.g., "The artist started the picture") although semantically they require event-denoting complements (e.g., "The artist started painting the picture"). In case of artifact-denoting objects, the complement is assumed to be type shifted (or "coerced") into an…
Descriptors: Psycholinguistics, Models, Semantics, Verbs
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Conklin, Kathy; Schmitt, Norbert – Applied Linguistics, 2008
It is generally accepted that formulaic sequences like "take the bull by the horns" serve an important function in discourse and are widespread in language. It is also generally believed that these sequences are processed more efficiently because single memorized units, even though they are composed of a sequence of individual words, can be…
Descriptors: Phrase Structure, Language Processing, Native Speakers, Second Language Learning
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McKague, Meredith; Davis, Chris; Pratt, Chris; Johnston, Michael B. – Journal of Research in Reading, 2008
Skilled readers were trained to recognise either the oral (n=44) or visual form (n=40) of a set of 32 novel words (oral and visual instantiation, respectively). Training involved learning the "meanings" for the instantiated words and was followed by a visual lexical decision task in which the instantiated words were mixed with real English words…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Phonology, Feedback (Response), Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
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Cohen-Mimran, Ravit – Journal of Child Language, 2009
The purpose of the present study was to explore the contribution of phonological and general language skills to reading fluency of pointed and unpointed Hebrew scripts. Reading, language and memory tasks were performed by 48 fifth-grade monolingual native Hebrew speakers. Results showed that the most marked predictor for both pointed and unpointed…
Descriptors: Semitic Languages, Language Skills, Reading Fluency, Semantics
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