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Fisher, Douglas; Johnson, Christine – Principal Leadership, 2006
A Number of good ideas can help improve the achievement of low-performing students and close the achievement gap, including determining the placement of veteran teachers, purchasing new curricula, and providing after-school tutoring. However, it is the teacher--and what the teacher does in the classroom--that makes the most difference for…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Professional Development, College School Cooperation, Protocol Analysis
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Alan S. Marcus; Richard J. Paxton; Peter Meyerson – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2006
What and how do students learn about history from motion pictures? How does this knowledge interact with the history they learn in school? This is a complex problem space that has seen little empirical research. To lay the groundwork for addressing these questions, we describe two exploratory studies. The first study takes a broad view, using…
Descriptors: Films, United States History, High Schools, History Instruction
Liaw, Meei-Ling – 1995
A study investigated the effectiveness of training students in think-aloud procedure to improve reading comprehension. Subjects were two groups of Taiwanese university students of English as a Foreign Language (EFL). In the first week, a think-aloud training session was given to one group. Then both groups were asked to read an English passage and…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Course Descriptions, English (Second Language), Foreign Countries
Cullum, Linda – 1998
A study examined the reading strategies of a "reluctant reader," a bright and accomplished fifth grader whose achievements had not as yet included a love of reading or very good comprehension skills. Subject of the study, a female, was an excellent student at a private school where whole language, reading and writing groups, and…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Grade 5, Intermediate Grades, Protocol Analysis
Paley, Karen Surman – 1994
An informal study explored the dynamics of the task of writing college application essays, which urge self-revelation but are judged by omnipotent admissions committees. Four students in the top 17% of their class of 194 in a predominantly white suburban school completed think-aloud protocols as they drafted a response to an application question…
Descriptors: Admissions Officers, Audience Awareness, College Admission, College Applicants
Dimakos, Ioannis C.; Porpodas, Constantine D. – 1993
The production of non-narrative information (descriptive versus expository) across written and oral modes was examined for second-, fourth-, and sixth-grade Greek elementary school students. Written and oral protocols were taken from a total of 240 students at each of 3 grades and evaluated according to: (1) the size of the text produced, measured…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Descriptive Writing, Elementary Education, Expository Writing
Morocco, Catherine Cobb; And Others – 1991
A case study of teachers' activity design processes presents early findings from an ongoing study that intends to contribute to a practical theory of activity design that captures and reduces the complexity of integrated activities. The study also points to the kind of support teachers need to reflect a more constructivist perspective in their…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Class Activities, Educational Research, Elementary Education
Ruddell, Martha Rapp-Haggard – 1989
A study examined students' metacognitive response to ambiguous literacy tasks to determine the relationship between that response and academic achievement. Subjects were 11 students chosen from a fifth-grade classroom in a small, urban school serving a predominantly black, middle class neighborhood. Two literacy tasks were identified as ambiguous:…
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Class Activities, Grade 5, Intermediate Grades
McKnight, Curtis C.; And Others – 1990
The ability to think critically in the presence of arguments with essential quantitative elements, most often graphical elements, will become an essential skill for educated citizens in the future. This paper takes one specific graphical display, a narrow series of observational and interpretational tasks related to a graph, and using a small set…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Psychology, College Mathematics
Prescott, Barbara L.; Doyle, Deborah A. – 1986
A pilot study explored what children between the ages of 8 and 11 focus on when they write about writing: how children define writing, what features they believe constitute the act and product of writing, and what kinds of writing children consider important and why. During a half-hour period, 36 students in grades 3 through 5 were asked to write…
Descriptors: Child Language, Content Analysis, Educational Theories, Elementary Education
Smith, Patricia L.; Wedman, John F. – 1988
This study compared the effects of an elaborated unit of instruction and a hierarchical unit on students' online processing activities, efficiency of encoding new information, and facility in solving problems. Participants were six education graduate students rated as novices on the to-be-learned content--a unit on the principles of photography.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Structures, Encoding (Psychology), Graduate Students
Flower, Linda – 1989
This study is the 10th in a series of reports from the Reading-to-Write Project, a collaborative study designed to examine the cognitive processes of college freshmen in the act of entering a university-level academic discourse community and to present a model of that transition. Subjects, 17 freshmen (of a total of 72 participating either as…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Critical Reading, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Clement, John; Konold, Clifford – 1989
Teaching students to think mathematically or to apply mathematics to the solution of real-world problems has become a national priority. This paper explores a method of developing the basic problem-solving skills in a remedial mathematics course at the college freshman level. The first part of this paper describes some basic problem-solving skills…
Descriptors: College Mathematics, Higher Education, Mathematical Applications, Mathematical Enrichment
Earthman, Elise Ann – 1989
A study examined the ways in which college readers interact with literary texts. The method of interviews and think-along protocols, in which a text was read aloud by the subject while he simultaneously verbalized his thoughts, was used to compare the reading processes of eight college freshman to those of eight masters students in literature who…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Comparative Analysis, Graduate Students, Higher Education
Hayes, John R.; And Others – 1985
A new model of the revision process in written composition, based on the results of thinking aloud protocol studies, is presented in this report. The report begins by discussing earlier observations and theories of revision that establish four points: (1) there are large differences among writers in the amount of revising they do, (2) expert…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Cognitive Processes, Learning Strategies, Learning Theories
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