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Downing, John; Thackray, Derek – 1971
The research being published in Britain regarding reading readiness is reviewed in this monograph. The factors teachers should take into account when planning prereading programs and determining when a child is ready to read are presented. The various aspects of reading readiness that are discussed include: (1) physiological factors, such as…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Cultural Influences, Early Reading, Environment
Katz, Leonard; Wicklund, David A. – 1972
This experiment was designed to test the hypothesis that subjects must know the length of the viewing matter they will be scanning before the target is presented in order to scan efficiently. Adult subjects were required to scan visually for a predetermined item. Targets were one, two, or four letters in length and the pairs of slides shown on…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adults, Information Processing, Reading Processes
Granskog, Dorothy – 1974
This study investigated how reading begins in speech. The subjects were nonreading kindergarten children divided into a control group of 20 students and an experimental group of 20 students. Both groups had an equal amount of discrimination practice upon the same sentences prior to test for word identification. The sentences for the experimental…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Kindergarten Children, Primary Education, Reading
Johns, Jerry L.; Ellis, DiAnn Waskul – 1975
The concepts of reading held by students in grades one through eight are reported on in this paper. Over 1600 children were individually interviewed to obtain answers to the following three questions: What is reading? What do you do when you read? And What would you tell someone reading is if that person were just beginning? The findings reveal…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, National Surveys
Anastasiow, Nicholas – 1970
Research findings concerned with the relationship between the child's oral language behavior and learning to read are described. A cognitive-biological approach to the child's perceptual system development is taken, and data are presented to support both the developmental point of view of language development and the point of view that the child…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Beginning Reading, Child Language, Cognitive Processes
Gephart, William J.; Penney, Monte – 1969
The convergence technique developed by Carrese and Baker is described, and an application to reading of this research technique is made. The use of the convergence technique includes (1) a planning session which delineates the final goal of the program, the intermediate goals and their sequence for achievement of the final goal, and research and…
Descriptors: Cooperative Programs, Coordination, Instructional Programs, Program Design
Smith, Nila Banton – 1970
Possibilities for change and innovations due to technological and intellectual advancement are viewed as they might occur in the seventies. (1) Information storage by microphotography and computer will make possible greater collections in extremely small physical spaces. (2) Biological and biochemical advances will bring greater understanding of…
Descriptors: Biochemistry, Biological Influences, Computers, Educational Technology
Goodman, Kenneth S.; Burke, Carolyn L. – 1969
The oral reading miscues of 18 proficient readers, six each from grades 2, 4, and 6, were divided into those which did not change syntactic structure (nontransformation miscues) and those which did (retransformation miscues) and were analyzed through the use of the Goodman Taxonomy of Reading Miscues. The two groups of miscues were compared with…
Descriptors: Deep Structure, Elementary Education, Reading Development, Reading Diagnosis
Kasdon, Lawrence M. – 1969
The disagreement on terminology used to describe reading difficulties and to classify reading underachievers is illustrated. Some of the research findings on physical, intellectual, emotional, and educational factors which cause reading difficulty are described, with emphasis on replying to questions asked by parents and on clarifying some…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Interdisciplinary Approach, Learning Disabilities, Learning Problems
Geyer, John J. – 1969
The role and importance of time was stressed as a key factor in an alternative theoretical viewpoint to the classic reading theory, which suggests that speed and comprehension are the two important dimensions of reading. Noting newer language processing models which detail the multiple interacting systems operating across time during the…
Descriptors: Eye Fixations, Eye Movements, Eye Voice Span, Measurement
Lott, Deborah – 1969
Little research has been done to explain just why words are recognized more easily than letters alone; although, this phenomenon has been accepted widely by educators. Therefore, a model of the processes involved in word recognition and suggestions concerning how these processes can be put to use in reading instruction are presented. The model…
Descriptors: Language Skills, Optical Scanners, Reading Instruction, Reading Processes
Coke, Esther U. – 1974
This study examined the adaptability of reading rate to passage difficulty under different conditions of task-induced processing. Sixteen experimental passages varying in subject matter and ranging from 85 to 171 words were selected from a set of 32 texts rated for comprehensibility. The eight easiest and eight hardest texts were selected. Another…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, High School Students, Readability, Reading
Guthrie, John T. – 1974
This current annual report describes the progress made in the following aspects of the organizational plan; the identification of a model of reading which includes a description of subskills that may be present in skilled readers and are acquired by most normal readers, the construction of criterion referenced tests to measure each of these…
Descriptors: Reading, Reading Ability, Reading Achievement, Reading Difficulties
Downing, John – 1971
The cognitive clarity theory may be stated quite simply and briefly: (1) Learning to read involved applying general intellectual abilities to the task. (2) Reading is usually a silent activity, and there are very few outward signs of what the behavior involves. (3) Children do not know the basic concepts involved in thinking about the tasks of…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Cognitive Processes, Learning, Reading
Cannon, Haskell D. – 1973
The purpose of this paper was to propose a theoretical description of the print reading process based on Piagetian concepts of mental functioning and to explore implications for educators which are compatible with such a theory. The methodology employed proceeds from a general explanation of mental functioning to one particular form, that of print…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Child Development, Cognitive Processes, Reading
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