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Peer reviewedChambless, Jim R.; Chambless, Martha S. – Reading Improvement, 1994
Compares effectiveness of computer-based instruction in K-2 to traditional instruction on the reading and writing achievement of second graders. Finds educationally significant effect sizes on comparisons of reading scores and measures of writing in favor of the computer-based instruction group for at-risk students. Suggests that computer-based…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Computer Assisted Instruction, Grade 2, High Risk Students
Peer reviewedDahl, Karin L. – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1993
Suggests that spontaneous utterances of first-grade inner-city children in whole-language classrooms in two urban sites reveal five trends in learner perceptions of beginning reading and writing: (1) metacognitive statements reporting learner self-appraisal and self-management; (2) sound/symbol relations; (3) hypotheses about reading; (4) patterns…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Beginning Writing, Grade 1, Inner City
Peer reviewedMulcahy-Ernt, Patricia I.; Ryshkewitch, Suzanne – Reading and Writing Quarterly: Overcoming Learning Difficulties, 1994
Investigates the types and depths of cognitive complexity that 11th-grade readers of high, average, and low reading ability exhibited when given either text-based comprehension questions or reader-based journal response writing assignments. Finds significant differences between the groups in type and depth of cognitive complexity, engagement with…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis, Grade 11, Journal Writing
Peer reviewedEntes, Judith – Research and Teaching in Developmental Education, 1992
Describes a study analyzing the effects of time patterns in three short stories on the level of engagement of four remedial reading college freshmen. Describes engaged and disengaged types of reader interaction. Indicates that stories featuring chronological order garnered similar responses from both types, whereas time-shifts discouraged…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Community Colleges, Compensatory Education, Reader Response
Peer reviewedRaban, Bridie – Reading, 1992
Notes the lack of funded research. Finds that evidence for beliefs is lacking in any broad frame, although there are reports which add to the picture concerning how children learn to read and how they become better readers. Discusses reading research methodology. (RS)
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries, Literature Reviews
Peer reviewedDiaper, Gordon – Educational Studies, 1990
Reexamines definitions of and explanations for the Hawthorne Effect in research subjects. Notes that the Hawthorne Effect was tested in a study of the effectiveness of paired classroom reading among students. Challenges the notion that subject's behavior is modified by participation in research. Reviews various research studies that question the…
Descriptors: Classroom Research, Control Groups, Educational Research, Experimental Groups
Peer reviewedCasteel, Mark A.; Simpson, Greg B. – Journal of Research in Reading, 1991
Studies second, fifth, eighth grade, and college undergraduate students' changes in the ability to draw inferences. Examines the generation process of the inferences. Finds that the ability to draw inferences increases with age; backward inferences are most likely to be drawn when the text is encoded; whereas forward inferences are most likely to…
Descriptors: Age Groups, Developmental Stages, Elementary Education, Grade 2
Peer reviewedNystrand, Martin; Gamoran, Adam – Research in the Teaching of English, 1991
Examines the kinds of instruction that foster student engagement with literature and the effects of such instruction on achievement. Describes the manifestations of procedural and substantive forms of engagements, explains how they relate differently to student outcomes, and offers some empirical propositions using data on literature instruction…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Childrens Literature, Classroom Research, English Instruction
Peer reviewedCombs, Martha – Reading Horizons, 1994
Addresses the concerns of first-grade teachers about the implementation of a holistic literature-based reading series. Notes that the teachers in the "conversation group" had not been direct participants in the adoption decision. Suggests that the conversation group enabled the teachers to assimilate change through the sharing of the…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Communication Research, Educational Change, Grade 1
Peer reviewedCenter, Yola; And Others – Educational Psychology: An International Journal of Experimental Educational Psychology, 1992
States that there is concern in Western nations that literacy rates are falling. Asserts Reading Recovery programs can reverse this trend. Reports on evaluation studies of Reading Recovery and contends that the short-term gains that result from Reading Recovery programs require further research. (CFR)
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literacy Education, Primary Education, Reading Diagnosis
Peer reviewedBrember, Ivy; Davies, Julie – Educational Psychology: An International Journal of Experimental Educational Psychology, 1997
Examines the reading attainment levels of a group of elementary students who had either experienced nursery, day care, or no preschool provision outside the home. Compares pupils' scores on reading tests over four years. Although the results were inconclusive they suggest positive reading attainment outcomes related to preschool experience. (MJP)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Day Care, Educational Attainment, Elementary Schools
Peer reviewedMcNinch, George H.; Shaffer, Gary L.; Campbell, Patricia; Rakes, Sondra – Reading Horizons, 1998
Examines how teachers allocate instructional time in reading classes. Indicates that teachers used 34% of time in reading and responding; 24.89% in listening and discussing; 8.36% waiting; 20.28% completing skill development; 7.52% in telling, writing, and narrating; 3.47% in other activities. Notes that the recommendation that time spent reading…
Descriptors: Class Organization, Classroom Techniques, Elementary Education, Grade 3
Peer reviewedGoldman, Susan – Discourse Processes, 1997
Outlines major research findings in cognitive-discourse-processing research on learning from text. Describes general characteristics of classrooms based on constructivist principles of learning and that support critical thinking, problem solving, and collaborative learning. Argues that such classrooms raise a number of new issues for…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Cognitive Processes, Constructivism (Learning), Cooperative Learning
Peer reviewedMesmer, Heidi Anne E. – Reading Teacher, 1999
Outlines one struggling second-grade reader's abilities and reading strategies, and initial instructional efforts with her. Discusses how the author determined a mismatch existed between her teaching, the teaching materials, and the child. Shows how a change of materials--to the use of decodable text accompanied by reflective, systematic,…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Grade 2, Instructional Effectiveness, Primary Education
Peer reviewedDaniels, Harvey; Zemelman, Steve; Bizar, Marilyn – Educational Leadership, 1999
"Decodable text" devotees say phonics is scientifically superior to the whole-language approach, which supposedly lacks research validation. However, 60 years of research supports holistic, literature-based approaches to literacy. Whole-language instruction is further validated by research on independent reading, cooperative learning, Reading…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Cooperative Learning, Decoding (Reading), Educational History


