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Peer reviewedDyson, Mary C.; Kipping, Gary J. – Visible Language, 1998
Describes two experiments that explore the effect of line length and paging versus scrolling on reading from screen. Finds that long lines were read faster than short lines with no change in comprehension and that subject's judgment of reading ease did not correlate with performance. Concludes that further study is needed. (PA)
Descriptors: Layout (Publications), Readability, Reader Text Relationship, Reading Comprehension
Peer reviewedWallace, Rich – ALAN Review, 1998
Looks back at the author's adolescent years and finds that words from songs and from friends helped him survive being a teenager. Notes that his first young adult novel, "Wrestling Sturbridge," was written to help at least a few kids get through adolescence. (RS)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Adolescents, Authors, Interpersonal Relationship
Peer reviewedKumpf, Eric P. – Technical Communication Quarterly, 2000
Considers how visual metadiscourse provides design criteria for authors when considering the needs and expectations of readers. Notes the author's discussions of textual metadiscourse in technical writing classes since 1995. Notes an improvement in the cohesion and considerateness of student writing after rethinking their role as writers and the…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Design, Higher Education, Reader Text Relationship
Peer reviewedStratman, James F. – Written Communication, 2000
Investigates readers' perceptions of bias in a Colorado ballot booklet intended to explain a tax cut proposal. Finds that readers were more likely to perceive the ballot booklet to be biased in favor of the proposed tax measure than against it. (SC)
Descriptors: Bias, Higher Education, Reader Response, Reader Text Relationship
Gerrig, Richard J.; O'Brien, Edward J. – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2005
In this article, we articulate the critical differences between memory-based processing and explanation-based processing. We suggest that the most important claim of memory-based text processing is that the automatic processes that function with respect to text processing are all applications of ordinary memory processes. This claim contrasts with…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Memory, Language Processing, Reading Processes
Janks, Hilary – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2005
By demonstrating lexical and grammatical analysis--the rough work that underpins critical discourse analysis--this paper demonstrates the importance of grammatical knowledge for the critical reading of texts. It also provides readers with a grammar rubric for working systematically with the linguistic analysis of texts and argues that Fairclough's…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Critical Reading, Grammar, Reader Text Relationship
McEneaney, John E. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2003
This article reports on an investigation of the relationship between print and hypertext reading skills in university students. The study employed a counterbalanced repeated measures design that required subjects to answer questions using both print and hypertext versions of a student advising handbook. Two research questions guided the study. One…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, Hypermedia, College Students, Reader Text Relationship
Rogers, Rebecca; Christian, June – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2007
This article analyzes the construction of Whiteness in children's literature that intentionally brings Whiteness to the surface. We wondered: do the authors re-center Whiteness in their attempts to racialize White people? What literary strategies and linguistic techniques do the authors call on to present Whiteness and, subsequently, Blackness?…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Childrens Literature, Whites, Racial Attitudes
Jewett, Pamela – Reading Psychology, 2007
Freire told his audience at a seminar at the University of Massachusetts, "You need to read knee-deep in texts, for deeper than surface meanings, and you need to know the words to be able to do it" (quoted in Cleary, 2003). In a children's literature class, fifteen teachers and I traveled along a path that moved us toward reading…
Descriptors: Teacher Educators, Justice, Childrens Literature, Teacher Education
Pike, Mark A. – Journal of Education & Christian Belief, 2007
This article addresses how Christians can read wisely and well as citizens of both God's kingdom and an increasingly secular society. I suggest that focussing on reading as a transaction between reader and text rather than on the morality of texts or the maturity of readers can provide a biblical approach for Christian educators seeking to invest…
Descriptors: Religious Factors, Spiritual Development, Christianity, Reading Materials
Larson, Sidner – American Indian Quarterly, 2007
James Welch's "Winter in the Blood" (1974) and "The Death of Jim Loney" (1979) are excellent examples of work that remains essentially misunderstood throughout some three decades of interpretation. Attempts to define these two books in terms of mainstream modernism notwithstanding, they represent a phenomenon not unlike aspects of American folk…
Descriptors: American Indians, Book Reviews, Literary Criticism, Didacticism
Damico, James; Baildon, Mark – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2007
Findings from this study of how two pairs of eighth-grade students each transacted with a website during think-aloud sessions at the conclusion of a curricular unit on Mexico and migration highlight the ways the students engaged in three interrelated tasks: (1) Identifying and making sense of "new" information; (2) Evaluating claims and evidence;…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Internet, Web Sites, Grade 8
Osana, Helena P.; Lacroix, Guy L.; Tucker, Bradley J.; Idan, Einat; Jabbour, Guillaume W. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2007
This study extended the work of S. Siddiqui, R. F. West, and K. E. Stanovich (1998), who studied the link between general print exposure and syllogistic reasoning. It was hypothesized that exposure to certain text structures that contain well-delineated logical forms, such as popularized scientific texts, would be a better predictor of deductive…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Inferences, Thinking Skills, Multiple Regression Analysis
Roser, Nancy; Martinez, Miriam; Fuhrken, Charles; McDonnold, Kathleen – Reading Teacher, 2007
Characters in children's books can help to guide readers through stories, contributing to deepened understandings of plot and themes. The authors discuss why characters become vivid and lasting in readers' minds, the ways in which students are often asked to think about characters in classroom literature study, and how students' understanding of…
Descriptors: Discussion, Journal Writing, Childrens Literature, Grade 1
Eva-Wood, Amy L. – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2008
Assuming that readers' emotional responses can enhance readers' metacognitive experiences and inform literary analysis, this study of 11th-grade poetry readers features instruction that models both cognitive and affective reading processes. The author: (1) Presents a case for more explicit attention to emotion in language arts classrooms; (2)…
Descriptors: Reading Strategies, Literary Criticism, Metacognition, Reading Processes

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