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Mosenthal, Peter B. – Reading Teacher, 1988
Defines two types of antimony--minor, contradictory statements that have major effects--and shows how they abound in reading research. Concludes that the problem of antimonies must be resolved before research, on empirical grounds alone, can effectively improve practice. (MM)
Descriptors: Reading Research, Research Methodology, Research Problems, Theory Practice Relationship
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Gallini, Joan K.; And Others – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1995
Investigates the influence of metaphors on text processing. Varies the degree of explicitness provided between a metaphor and new information. Finds that metaphors increase learning of the idea units strongly related to the metaphors, and thus can be used to increase learning of particular material in text. (SR)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Metaphors, Reading Comprehension, Reading Research
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Mosenthal, Peter B. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1995
Surveys issues raised in earlier articles in this issue of the journal regarding standards for reading research methodologies. Offers a tentative explanation of why debates, paradigm wars, and parallel play are prevalent in literacy research. (RS)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Reading Research, Research Methodology, Research Problems
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Heap, James Louis – Reading Research Quarterly, 1995
Comments on several other articles in this issue of the journal regarding standards for reading research methodologies. Distinguishes between conceptions of inquiry concerned with human actions and events. Sees the ends of inquiry as "design features" of different types of rational features, controlled inquiries, of which natural, social, and…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Qualitative Research, Reading Research, Research Methodology
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Fincher-Kiefer, Rebecca – Discourse Processes, 1994
Finds that perceptual identification of target words explicitly presented was significantly higher than that of new targets and that targets inferred to maintain coherence and targets predicted by the text were identified as well as explicit targets and significantly better than targets schematically appropriate to the text. (SR)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Inferences, Memory, Perception
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Hildebrandt, Nancy; Sokol, Scott M. – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 1993
Reports a case study of an acquired dyslexic subject who showed no evidence of having any access to sublexical phonological information. Notes, however, that the subject showed normal effects of spelling regularity for low-frequency words, suggesting sublexical phonological processing. Suggests that the types of explicit tasks previously used are…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Dyslexia, Elementary Education, Phonology
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Zabrucky, Karen; Moore, Dewayne – Reading Psychology, 1991
Uses an error detection paradigm to examine the use of different standards of evaluation in younger and older adults who are skilled or less skilled at evaluating their understanding. Finds that skilled readers more often detect falsehoods and inconsistencies than nonsense words, whereas less skilled readers more often detect nonsense words and…
Descriptors: Adults, Error Patterns, Reading Processes, Reading Research
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Fincher-Kiefer, Rebecca – Journal of Research in Reading, 1992
Tests how domain-related knowledge influences inference generation during text comprehension. Examines local and global inferences. Finds that all knowledge groups process sentences involved in local inferences similarly, but not global inferences. Suggests that individuals with prior knowledge use their knowledge actively to generate global…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Inferences, Prior Learning, Reading Comprehension
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Ellis, Nick; Cataldo, Suzanne – Language and Education, 1990
Assesses early interactive processes of development in reading, spelling, and implicit and explicit phonological awareness in a group of children at four time-points as they progressed through their first three years in school. Finds that results describe the ways in which spelling acts as a mediator for the influence of explicit phonological…
Descriptors: Phonology, Primary Education, Reading, Reading Processes
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Chamberlain, Julia; Leal, Dorothy – Reading Teacher, 1999
Determines readability levels for each of the Caldecott Medal books, and presents the full list. Finds that the overall grade-level readability average was 4.75. Offers some suggestions for using the books in elementary classrooms. (SR)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Picture Books, Readability
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Rach, Leslie; Dreher, Mariam Jean – National Reading Conference Yearbook, 1998
Examines three work sites employing deaf individuals (graduates of Gallaudet University), investigating how much time deaf adults spend reading and writing on the job; what types of reading and writing activities they engage in; how deaf employees communicate with their hearing supervisors/co-workers; and what their perceptions are of literacy…
Descriptors: Adults, Communication (Thought Transfer), Deafness, Reading Research
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Naslund, Jan Carol; Smolkin, Laura B. – Reading and Writing Quarterly: Overcoming Learning Difficulties, 1997
Notes that reading research has advanced from notions that reading is a visual-perception task of word recognition and decoding to more precise psycho- and neurolinguistic models of language and literacy. Concludes that reading is a skill that develops to an automatic level depending on the degree to which the individual can access phonemic and…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Phonemics, Reading Comprehension, Reading Processes
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Thurlow, Richard; van den Broek, Paul – Reading and Writing Quarterly: Overcoming Learning Difficulties, 1997
Focuses on inferential processes in reading and the question of whether those processes are automatic. Examines the importance of inference generation during reading comprehension. Describes research that investigates which inferences appear to be automatic. Discusses characteristics of skilled reading that are related to the automaticity of…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Inferences, Reading Comprehension, Reading Processes
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Albrecht, Jason E.; Myers, Jerome L. – Discourse Processes, 1998
Demonstrates that reactivation of unsatisfied goal information depended on the type of original goal context and whether it was fully reinstated and that reinstatement of goal information from the distant target episode was successful only when the context was fully reinstated. Supports models of comprehension that assume reactivation of relevant…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Memory, Prior Learning, Reading Comprehension
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Cook, Anne E.; Halleran, Jennifer G.; O'Brien, Edward J. – Discourse Processes, 1998
Tests two views of how relevant global information becomes readily available to readers. Demonstrates that backgrounded information became readily available if it shared features in common with the current contents of working memory. Shows that this occurred independently of whether the information was relevant or thematically related;…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Language Processing, Memory, Reading Comprehension
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