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Peer reviewedHo, Connie Suk-han; Ma, Rachel Nga-lun – Journal of Research in Reading, 1999
Investigates Chinese dyslexic children's efficiency in employing phonological strategies in reading and the effectiveness of training phonological strategies in improving reading performance. Finds subjects did not use the phonological strategies as efficiently as Chinese average readers, and the training program was effective in significantly…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Foreign Countries, Instructional Effectiveness, Phonology
Peer reviewedStuart, Morag; Masterson, Jackie; Dixon, Maureen – Journal of Research in Reading, 2000
Investigates the relation between phonological awareness, sound-to-letter mapping knowledge, and printed word learning in novice five-year-old readers. Explores effects of visual memory and of teaching methods. Finds mental representations of printed words are more easily formed by beginners who are able to match at least some of the phonological…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Memory, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Primary Education
Peer reviewedHatcher, Peter – Journal of Research in Reading, 2000
Rates 200 Reading Recovery books on five variables thought to represent "semantic,""syntactic," and "phonic" features of text. Finds the variables accounted for 83% of book level variance. Supports the validity of the Reading Recovery book levels. Suggests that the formula can be used by teachers to grade children's…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Predictor Variables, Primary Education, Reading Material Selection
Peer reviewedClipson-Boyles, Suzi – Journal of Research in Reading, 2000
Describes pilot research that informed the early stages of development of the Catch Up Programme, a literacy intervention designed for children who are behind with reading at the start of Year 3 (7- to 8-year-olds). Finds a considerable increase in pupils' reading ages across a 10-week period. Finds similar results in another small study. (RS)
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Foreign Countries, Pilot Projects, Primary Education
Peer reviewedReinking, David; Labbo, Linda; McKenna, Michael – Journal of Research in Reading, 2000
Presents a developmental framework for interpreting and understanding how new digital technologies have been integrated into literacy instruction and research and how they might be integrated in the future. Argues that assimilation and accommodation define a developmental reality that helps explain a variety of issues pertaining to new…
Descriptors: Digital Computers, Elementary Secondary Education, Reading Instruction, Reading Research
Peer reviewedSmith, Lana J.; Ross, Steven M.; Casey, Jason – Journal of Literacy Research, 1996
Investigates effects of the Success for All (SFA) program on elementary school students' reading achievement in 4 cities. Finds greater achievement for students in SFA classes at 3 sites, especially for students achieving below the 25th percentile, relative to students in control classrooms, but effects were not as strong and consistent as in the…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Program Effectiveness, Reading Achievement
Peer reviewedMumtaz, Shazia; Humphreys, Glyn W. – Journal of Research in Reading, 2001
Explores the effects of Urdu on the acquisition of English literacy skills by comparing the reading, memory and phonological processing skills of bilingual Urdu-English and monolingual English children (7-8 years old). Demonstrates that bilingual reading development can have a positive effect on the acquisition of literacy skills, such as…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, English Instruction, Instructional Effectiveness, Language Processing
Peer reviewedSinger, Murray – Discourse Processes, 1996
Examines comprehension of causal text sequences (in simulation) using construction-integration analysis. States that 16 preliminary simulations, applied to 2 text frames each, influenced decisions concerning 4 simulation choice points. Reveals good qualitative fit between the construction-integration activation of the probe questions and their…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Influences
Peer reviewedZwaan, Rolf A.; Brown, Carol M. – Discourse Processes, 1996
Examines the influence of language proficiency and comprehension skill on situation-model construction during narrative comprehension. Studies 12 college students who thought aloud reading French and English stories for comprehension and who performed a verb-clustering task after reading each text. Finds that the students generated more…
Descriptors: College Students, Higher Education, Inferences, Language Proficiency
Peer reviewedGibbs, Raymond W., Jr.; And Others – Discourse Processes, 1995
Reports on the results of four experiments that show that people can recognize ironic meanings that were not intended, and that processing unintended irony can be done easily precisely because speakers' utterances, unbeknownst to them, create ironic situations. Discusses implications for psycholinguistic theories of irony comprehension and for…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Irony, Language Processing
Peer reviewedAbu-Rabia, Salim – Reading Psychology, 1995
Examines relationships between phonological skills and reading in 143 Arab children in Arab villages of central Israel. Finds that a word recognition test was highly correlated with phonological skills, semantic processing, syntactic knowledge, and short-term memory, and that poor readers significantly lagged in skill development. Discusses…
Descriptors: Arabic, Beginning Reading, Comparative Analysis, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedKragler, Sherry – Reading Psychology, 1995
Investigates the internalization process of reading among 32 first graders. Finds that more of the experimental group students (who were allowed to "mumble read" during instructional and silent reading time) were reading silently as well as having higher reading placements than the control group (whose vocalizations were suppressed). (RS)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Grade 1, Language Acquisition, Oral Reading
Peer reviewedKinney-Sedgwick, Martha; Yochum, Nina – Reading Research and Instruction, 1996
Compares fifth-grade teachers' views of teaching a content area literacy lesson with those of literacy professors. Finds that the majority of teachers followed the text closely and took a dominant role as transmitter of knowledge, while professors were not constrained by the text and emphasized a constructivist view of learning. Discusses…
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Higher Education, Intermediate Grades, Reader Text Relationship
Peer reviewedChan, Lorna K. S. – Journal of Research in Reading, 1996
Finds that teaching 13-year-old poor readers to use effective reading strategies convinced them that reading successes and failures were attributable to use of effective or ineffective strategies; improved their comprehension performance and increased use of reading strategies; and reduced their perceptions of learned helplessness. (RS)
Descriptors: Helplessness, Junior High Schools, Low Achievement, Reading Achievement
Peer reviewedWilhelm, Jeffrey D. – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1995
Compares responses of two highly reluctant learning-disabled readers before and after they were helped to visualize story situations through visual art. Shows that visual art helped the readers to begin enjoying reading, and to begin evoking and manipulating story worlds in their minds. Notes that the students began to participate in the classroom…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Comparative Analysis, Elementary Education, Learning Disabilities


