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Wilson, D. Reece – ProQuest LLC, 2010
The purpose of this study was to compare the effects of text genre on student learning from science text, using science-related traditional informational and poetic informational texts, with fifth-graders. Four texts were used: a traditional informational text about caves, a poetic informational text about caves, a traditional informational text…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Reading Ability, Academic Achievement, Comparative Analysis
Jonell, Lynne – School Library Journal, 2010
Every adult who reads to a child has seen what happens when a book speaks. For a time, the book becomes the child's beloved friend. It is asked for repeatedly and learned by heart. But books do more than speak to a child. Children use books to speak to adults. If one wants to understand a child's deepest emotions, take a look at the books they…
Descriptors: Empowerment, Children, Books, Reading
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Kobayashi, Keiichi – Reading Psychology, 2010
Two experiments were conducted to examine whether students use arguments with refutation in one text for evaluating the opposite arguments without refutation in another text. Undergraduate students read two conflicting texts in either of the two orders: pro arguments text first and con arguments text first. After reading each text, they evaluated…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Persuasive Discourse, Essays, Experiments
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Reading Teacher, 2010
Meaningful conversations are a powerful tool to help students understand what they read and make text-to-self connections. This simple lesson, which is designed for repeated use with both fiction and nonfiction, provides students with strategies to support conversations about texts. Students will learn how to determine which ideas work best to…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Interpersonal Communication, Educational Strategies, Teaching Methods
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Larkin-Lieffers, Patricia A. – Literacy, 2010
Images of childhood are ideas and expectations of childhood and children, and are reflections of individual perception and cultural ideologies. In writing children's books, authors draw on their conscious and unconscious thoughts of childhood to create an implied reader. In this paper I investigate images of childhood through examination of the…
Descriptors: Children, Reader Text Relationship, Young Children, Early Reading
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Love, Jessica; McKoon, Gail; Gerrig, Richard J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
Current theories of text processing say little about how authors' narrative choices, including the introduction of small mysteries, can affect readers' narrative experiences. Gerrig, Love, and McKoon (2009) provided evidence that 1 type of small mystery--a character introduced without information linking him or her to the story--affects readers'…
Descriptors: Authors, Literary Devices, Story Grammar, Narration
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Divakaruni, Chitra Banerjee – Language Arts, 2010
Divakaruni reflects on her path to becoming an author for children, including her formative encounters with stories told by her grandfather in her native India, and experiences as a mother and as an Indian woman in the post-9/11 context of the United States.
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Authors, Personal Narratives, Story Telling
Pan, Pamela Lidan – ProQuest LLC, 2012
Through this research project, I aim to address three problems in the instruction of basic skills students. First, despite the large number of students enrolled in community college basic skills programs, the success rate is low. Second, many basic skills courses are taught with drill and memorization, with little attention paid to intellectually…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Basic Skills, Literacy Education, Instructional Design
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Blue, Elfreda V. – Reading & Writing Quarterly, 2012
Students read text through the sociocultural perspective from which they emerge. They interpret the text that is read through personal and cultural cues, through experiences acquired within a particular cultural context. When no cultural cues are familiar, students have difficulty identifying with and understanding literary text. In…
Descriptors: African American Students, Middle School Students, Sociocultural Patterns, Reader Text Relationship
Buettner, Edwin G. – Online Submission, 2011
Though its popularity has waxed and waned, cloze continues to be regarded as an instructional strategy for the fostering of reading comprehension. This article takes the view of cloze as one tactic in support of strategy instruction, rather than a strategy in its own right. In contrast to the formulaic applications of cloze for assessment…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Reading Comprehension, Developmental Stages, English (Second Language)
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Smith, Cheryl Hogue – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2011
Intertextuality is a vital component of college reading and writing. In order to write a paper that requires the synthesizing of readings, students must recognize the intertextual connections among all their sources. Instruction that fosters intertextual awareness in basic writers can help them overcome their tendency to compartmentalize what they…
Descriptors: College Students, Writing (Composition), Teaching Methods, Writing Instruction
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Witzel, Naoko; Qiao, Xiaomei; Forster, Kenneth – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
It is well established that in masked priming, a target word (e.g., "JUDGE") is primed more effectively by a transposed letter (TL) prime (e.g., "jugde") than by an orthographic control prime (e.g., "junpe"). This is inconsistent with the slot coding schemes used in many models of visual word recognition. Several…
Descriptors: Priming, Evidence, Familiarity, Word Recognition
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Armstrong, Sonya L.; Newman, Mary – Journal of College Reading and Learning, 2011
In this article, a model of intertextuality is introduced as an instructional approach for postsecondary developmental reading courses. This model involves a scaffolded, schema building approach to teaching college reading that aims to link core material (a text, a concept, or specific academic content) with supplementary texts that focus on…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Reading Instruction, College Students, Learner Engagement
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Howells, Gary – Teaching History, 2011
How can we help pupils learn to read historically? Gary Howells explores this question by explaining how he builds reading challenges into the course of his pupils' post-16 studies and by describing some of the tasks that pupils are set and the principles that underpin them. Howells argues that over time and through stepped and scaffolded tasks,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, History, Reading Skills, Historiography
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Kalman, Calvin S. – Science & Education, 2011
Students can have great difficulty reading scientific texts and trying to cope with the professor in the classroom. Part of the reason for students' difficulties is that for a student taking a science gateway course the language, ontology and epistemology of science are akin to a foreign culture. There is thus an analogy between such a student and…
Descriptors: Foreign Culture, Scientific Concepts, Concept Formation, Epistemology
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