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Robinson, Fay; Sulzby, Elizabeth – 1983
A total of 15 parents participated in interviews about storybooks selected as favorites by their preschool children. Interviews were set up with the parent who said he or she read most often to the child and focused on one of two books the parent stated was either a greater or more enduring favorite. The parents' responses were content-analyzed…
Descriptors: Books, Childhood Attitudes, Childrens Literature, Interviews
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Roselle, Daniel, Ed. – Social Education, 1976
Nine short stories and excerpts are presented relating to 18th-Century French History. The purpose of the readings are to: 1) increase student sensitivity to conditions in 18th-Century France; 2) add to their appreciation of the variety of human experiences; and 3) strengthen student insight into the nature of human beings. (Author/JR)
Descriptors: Eighteenth Century Literature, European History, French Literature, Humanization
Williams, Geoffrey; And Others – 1986
Focusing on common misconceptions about children who have trouble learning to read, two papers discuss new ways to think about and teach these students. "Revaluing Readers and Reading," by Kenneth S. Goodman, argues that troubled readers should not be thought of as sufferers from an illness, but as strong, healthy individuals fully…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Reading Instruction, Reading Research
Rogers, C. D. – 1986
Two studies carried out by James Squire and Jesse Stuart explored processes used in reading the short story, ways of exploring student's processes, possibilities within the short story as a literary genre, and methods teachers can use. Squire's study showed that introspection and retrospection are useful in studying students' reading processes. In…
Descriptors: Questioning Techniques, Reading Processes, Reading Research, Secondary Education
Dwyer, Edward J.; Isbell, Rebecca J. – 1988
Reading aloud is an essential part of the classroom instructional program, along with direct instruction and sustained silent reading or book contact, and should not be slighted despite the numerous time demands from other sources. Reading aloud to children provides opportunities for introducing children to good literature and encourages language…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Language Arts, Reading Aloud to Others, Reading Instruction
Mandler, Jean M. – 1983
The differences between story grammar and story schema are outlined and discussed based on research on story understanding by children and adults. The contention of all story grammars is that stories have a relatively invariant structure despite great differences in story content. The importance of structure within folk tales, and the ways in…
Descriptors: Children, Discourse Analysis, Folk Culture, Recall (Psychology)
Bauer, Caroline Feller – 1977
This handbook for beginning and advanced storytellers, parents, and professionals introduces techniques and resources to develop and extend storytelling skills. It is divided into four parts. Part 1 outlines program planning, promotion, and storytelling techniques. Part 2 covers the sources for storytelling of narrative tables, fables and myths,…
Descriptors: Adults, Guides, Intermediate Grades, Preschool Children
LEWIS, CLAUDIA – 1967
THE QUALITIES WHICH MAKE STORYBOOKS AND PICTURE BOOKS APPEALING TO PRESCHOOL CHILDREN AND THOSE WHICH HELP THEM UNDERSTAND AND MASTER THE USES OF LANGUAGE ARE DISCUSSED BRIEFLY. DIFFERENT TYPES OF BOOKS THAT APPEAL TO PRESCHOOL CHILDREN ARE PRESENTED--BOOKS THAT ENCOURAGE THE HEALTHY EXPRESSION OF EMOTIONS, BOOKS THAT ENABLE THEM TO PARTICIPATE,…
Descriptors: Bibliotherapy, Book Reviews, Books, Childrens Literature
Peterson, Linda – 1978
This literature curriculum for second graders introduces nine story types in 33 lessons, covering more than 40 separate concepts about literature. Designed to be used with telelessons, each of the nine units, corresponding to a specific story type, presents a lesson for each story of that type. Lessons provide lesson objectives and a program…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Curriculum Guides, Elementary Education, Grade 2
Bruce, Bertram – 1978
Children learning to read are often exposed to "stories" which are really little more than lists of sentences. A good story has at least continuity and conflict which may be analyzed in two ways: story grammar (analysis of setting and plot) and plans and beliefs (analysis of the plans and beliefs of the characters, including the reader's…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Elementary Education, Literary Criticism, Reading Comprehension
Brandt, Florence M.; And Others – Instructor, 1976
In this article thirty second graders joyously celebrated George Washington's birthday with a musical, one-act play. Also, an amusing poem was presented, a story about Groundhog Day was told, and a game activity for a valentine's party was described. (RK)
Descriptors: Dialogs (Literary), Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Learning Activities
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Mauer, Ruth A. – Exceptional Children, 1979
In order to determine if identification and affinity for a storybook hero are functions of physical status, 127 children (ages 4 to 7 years) in two groups (one disabled) were randomly assigned to one of two storybook treatments telling of two boys' friendship. (Author/PHR)
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Attitudes, Empathy, Identification (Psychology)
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
L'Engle, Madeleine – Language Arts, 1978
Presents the value of stories, especially fairy tales, as ways of both tutoring and expressing the imaginative and intuitive side of the personality. (DD)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Creative Expression, Elementary Education, Fairy Tales
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rees, Jocelyn Marie – Arithmetic Teacher, 1978
A story is told of a town that loses all of its linear measuring devices, only to devise a new method of measuring, the metric system! (JT)
Descriptors: Elementary School Mathematics, Elementary Secondary Education, Instruction, Mathematics Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Iran-Nejad, Asghar – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1987
Two experiments investigated some of the cognitive and affective causes of interest and liking. Results did not support the hypothesis that degree of surprise per se causes interest. The hypothesis that interest and liking arise from different causes was supported. (Author/LMO)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Cognitive Processes, Correlation, Higher Education
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