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Levin, Joel R.; And Others – 1975
Previous research has demonstrated that requiring children to trace from memory the correct member of a pictorial discrimination pair markedly facilitates performance. The subjects for the first experiment in this study were 45 fifth grade students. The control group was given regular discrimination learning instructions. The image-trace group was…
Descriptors: Discrimination Learning, Elementary Education, Imagery, Memory
Hatch, Evelyn – 1971
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of focus (subject, object, and possessive) and embedding position (center vs. right) on kindergarten and second-grade subjects' responses to relative clauses. Twenty kindergarten and 20 second-grade children served as subjects. The subjects were middle-class, Anglo children who had not begun…
Descriptors: Primary Education, Reaction Time, Reading Research, Search Strategies
Rudegeair, Robert E. – 1970
The findings of Marsh and Sherman's investigation, in 1970, of the speech sound discrimination ability of kindergarten subjects, are discussed in this paper. In the study a comparison was made between performance when speech sounds were presented in isolation and when speech sounds were presented in a word context, using minimal sound contrasts.…
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Consonants, Educational Research, Phonemes
Van Matre, Nicholas H.; And Others – 1975
Two experiments were conducted with college students as subjects in an effort to determine the note taking strategy most effective for learning from lecture. In one experiment students listened to a lecture while engaging in either parallel or distributed note taking. The information density of the lecture and the lecture presentation speed were…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Lecture Method, Postsecondary Education, Reading Research
Fleming, James T. – 1975
The purpose of this paper is to present two studies, one which questions some previously reported data on phonemic recoding and another which suggests an alternative interpretation for the evidence that Rubenstein and Lewis claimed in support of phonemic recoding. In one experiment three subsets of nonsense words were presented to 35 paid graduate…
Descriptors: Adults, Phonemes, Phonemics, Reading
Lamb, Pose – 1975
This paper reviews the literature and research related to reading and language with an emphasis on linguistics. Topics covered in the paper include: a definition of language, phonology, dialects, oral language, cultural differences, reading materials, morphology, syllabic generalizations, syntax, readability, and the cloze procedure. (WR)
Descriptors: Language Skills, Linguistics, Literature Reviews, Reading
Boyce, Max W. – 1974
This comprehensive, 300-item bibliography on the cloze procedure lists a significant proportion of the cloze literature. It is comprised of books, articles, and papers in which there is at least a substantial and/or significant cloze component. The references are arranged in alphabetical order by authors. Those citations that have been published…
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Cloze Procedure, Readability, Reading Ability
Karp, Laenu A. G. – 1975
Based on recommendations of the Harvard Report on Reading, a 33-item instrument was sent to a small sample of school districts originally surveyed to see the amount of implementation a decade later. Because only a small sample was surveyed, the states are grouped into seven regions. Measures of implementation based on the percentage of…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Reading Instruction, Reading Programs, Reading Research
Cronnell, Bruce – 1973
The nature of and problems with words of more than one syllable are discussed in this paper, and strategies for teaching and reading such words are suggested. It is postulated that the major problem in reading words of more than one syllable is stress and its effect on vowel pronunciation. It is also reasonable to assume that words become more…
Descriptors: Phonics, Reading Instruction, Reading Research, Syllables
Dunn, Mary Kathryn, Comp.; Harris, Larry A., Comp. – 1969
Current research studies related to oral reading at the elementary level are abstracted and listed by author in Part I of this bibliography. Part II contains citations and brief annotations of documents published from 1900 to 1950. Entries deal with such aspects as improving oral reading ability, using oral reading as a diagnostic tool, and using…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Elementary Education, Oral Reading, Reading Instruction
Underwood, Benton J.; Zimmerman, Joel – 1973
Two-syllable words were presented singly for study followed by a two-alternative, forced-choice test to 120 college students divided into four groups of 30 each. Half of the new words on the test ("I" words) were constructed by combining two syllables taken from two different study words, and half were neutral words ("C" words). If, as a…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Learning, Memory
Travers, Jeffrey R. – 1973
Previous work shows that skilled college level readers tend to apprehend words as wholes, whereas they tend to process random strings of letters as a series of individual letters. Subjects in the study were forced to process words and non-word strings both serially and under conditions which allowed simultaneous processing, and their performances…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Learning Processes, Reading Processes, Reading Research
Cunningham, Donald J.; Keller, Don F. – 1972
This study is one of a series of studies conducted or planned by the authors investigating the information processing strategies employed by students who are placed in a quasi-instructional setting of learning from text with questions interspersed. The subjects were 65 undergraduate students from two introductory educational psychology courses.…
Descriptors: College Students, Information Processing, Learning Processes, Questioning Techniques
Stanners, Robert S. – 1972
The purpose of Experiment I was to investigate the context effect of letter perception for nonword material. The significance of finding a context effect for nonwords would be that the basis of the effect would have to be a product of a person's knowledge of the phonological or orthographic structure of the language rather than attributable to a…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cues, Memory, Orthographic Symbols
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Guthrie, John T. – Journal of Reading, 1978
Explores the aspects of memory that allow people to remember what they have comprehended from reading. (MKM)
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Memorization, Memory, Psychological Studies
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