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Peer reviewedNicaise, Molly; Gettinger, Maribeth – Reading Psychology, 1995
Describes a five-week intervention to improve reading comprehension of four college students, focusing on expert reading strategies, metacognitive awareness, and enhancing self-efficacy. Finds that all participants improved on the targeted reading strategies, made significant gains in reading comprehension, and reported high satisfaction with the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Metacognition, Reading Comprehension, Reading Difficulties
Peer reviewedBossert, Teresa S.; Schwantes, Frederick M. – Reading Research and Instruction, 1996
Examines the effect of training fourth-grade children to use the regulation strategy of rereading as a means of answering questions about previously read text. Finds that subjects trained in the rereading strategy used the strategy more often and were more likely to produce correct responses than were control subjects. (RS)
Descriptors: Grade 4, Intermediate Grades, Reader Text Relationship, Reading Comprehension
Peer reviewedLervag, Arne; Braten, Ivar – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2002
Attempts to replicate the release-from-competition effect (a difficult concurrent memory task speeds pronunciation of low-frequency irregular words but slows pronunciation of other word types) with mature normal readers of Norwegian (undergraduate education students) and thus tested the generalizability of dual-route models to a considerably more…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Memory, Reading Instruction
Peer reviewedSmith, M Cecil – Journal of Literacy Research, 2000
Finds adult readers' efforts at and enjoyment of reading tasks varied depending on the texts and purpose for reading. Notes most readers relied on activating prior knowledge, rereading of text, and note taking. Finds a significant three-way interaction between reading source, setting, and occupation only. Illustrates how specific social context…
Descriptors: Adults, Context Effect, Reading Attitudes, Reading Habits
Peer reviewedGriffin, Mary Lee – Reading Teacher, 2002
Suggests that pairing emergent readers of approximately equal expertise provides opportunities for collaborative relationships where young readers pool expertise in jointly constructing text. Notes that children's language use contributed to their shared motivation and, by extension, helped to create and support the "shared situations"…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Cooperation, Emergent Literacy, Grade 1
Peer reviewedde Jong, Peter F.; van der Leij, Aryan – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2002
Examines specific effects of phonological abilities and linguistic comprehension on the development of word-decoding ability and reading comprehension, respectively, of 141 Dutch children from the end of first grade to the end of third grade. Finds that partly different determinants underlie the development of word-decoding ability and reading…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Foreign Countries, Phonology, Primary Education
Peer reviewedWolf, Maryanne; Katzir-Cohen, Tami – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2001
Confronts 3 large lacunae in research on reading fluency: definition, component structure, and theory-based intervention. Presents a developmental- and component-based definition of reading fluency. Discusses how different types of current fluency interventions correspond to particular components in fluency's structure and to particular phases of…
Descriptors: Definitions, Elementary Education, Reading Comprehension, Reading Difficulties
Peer reviewedSimpson, Michele L.; Nist, Sherrie L. – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2000
Reviews research investigating strategies for reading and studying at the college level. Examines 5 generalizations that emerged: (1) task understanding is critical to strategic learning; (2) beliefs about learning influence how students read and study; (3) quality instruction is essential; (4) a variety of research-based strategies should be…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Learning Strategies, Literature Reviews
Peer reviewedLeal, Dorothy; Moss, Barbara – Reading Horizons, 1999
Examines the nature of engagement with informational text by exploring four gifted students' responses to children's information books and informational storybooks. Indicates that these children expressed a variety of reasons for reading non-fiction and held interesting perceptions and strong opinions about informational content. Finds that…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Gifted, Interviews, Nonfiction
Peer reviewedDuncan, Lynne G.; Johnston, Rhona S. – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 1999
Examines phonological awareness at the level of phonemes and rhyme and relates this to nonword naming ability. Finds that phoneme awareness correlated significantly with poor readers' word and nonword reading ability, whereas rhyming skill did not. Concludes that phoneme awareness may be more important than rhyming skill in understanding reading…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Elementary Education, Individual Differences, Phonemes
Peer reviewedSavage, Robert; Stuart, Morag – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2001
Investigates the use of orthographic analogies in 6-year-olds. Notes that neither rime nor phoneme awareness measures were correlated with rime inference uses and that vowel, but not rime inference, was correlated with scaffolding errors. Finds that rime detection was the strongest predictor of reading ability, whereas phoneme segmentation was the…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Orthographic Symbols, Phonemic Awareness, Predictor Variables
Peer reviewedStainthorp, R.; Hughes, D. – Reading, 2000
Reports on a series of semi-structured interviews conducted with the parents of 15 "precocious" readers during their child's time in Key Stage 1. Notes the parents were interviewed three times: once each academic year. Concludes there are important lessons to be learned from these parents; however, as the parents of children with a precocious…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, High Achievement, Interviews, Parent Attitudes
Peer reviewedCompton, Donald L. – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2000
Examines relative importance of both static and dynamic measures of cognitive-processing abilities and emergent print knowledge in first-grade children. Finds growth in cognitive-processing abilities and general knowledge about print could be measured and adequately modeled. Suggests a strong association between the rate of growth in cognitive…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Decoding (Reading), Emergent Literacy, Grade 1
Peer reviewedConnelly, Vincent; Johnston, Rhona; Thompson, G. Brian – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2001
Investigates whether two groups of 6-year-old beginning readers taught to read by a phonics and by a "book experience" non-phonics approach would differ in reading comprehension as well as the processes of word recognition. Finds that the non-phonics approach taught children much faster reading reaction times to familiar words but they scored…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Phonics, Primary Education, Reading Comprehension
Peer reviewedWade-Woolley, Lesly; Geva, Esther – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2000
Administers a phonological task to 34 English-speaking grade 2 children (attending a bilingual English-Hebrew elementary school) to tap sensitivity to a phonemic contrast that occurs productively in Hebrew but is phonotactically constrained in English. Concludes a general level of phonological ability is required for reading to develop but that…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Grade 2, Hebrew, Phonology


