Publication Date
| In 2026 | 1 |
| Since 2025 | 106 |
| Since 2022 (last 5 years) | 619 |
| Since 2017 (last 10 years) | 1458 |
| Since 2007 (last 20 years) | 2459 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
| Practitioners | 301 |
| Teachers | 268 |
| Researchers | 91 |
| Parents | 37 |
| Students | 37 |
| Administrators | 15 |
| Policymakers | 6 |
| Counselors | 3 |
| Support Staff | 2 |
| Community | 1 |
| Media Staff | 1 |
| More ▼ | |
Location
| China | 86 |
| Canada | 68 |
| United Kingdom (England) | 51 |
| Germany | 48 |
| Australia | 47 |
| Turkey | 47 |
| Japan | 43 |
| Netherlands | 41 |
| Iran | 34 |
| Spain | 33 |
| Taiwan | 32 |
| More ▼ | |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
| No Child Left Behind Act 2001 | 6 |
| Education Consolidation… | 5 |
| Elementary and Secondary… | 2 |
| Equal Access | 1 |
| Goals 2000 | 1 |
| National Defense Education Act | 1 |
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
| Meets WWC Standards without Reservations | 1 |
| Meets WWC Standards with or without Reservations | 2 |
| Does not meet standards | 8 |
Peer reviewedBrantmeier, Cindy – Foreign Language Annals, 2001
Shows that much of the second language reading process at the intermediate level remains unexplained. Calls for more research at the intermediate level that examines key variables, such as passage content and gender. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Prior Learning, Reading Processes, Reading Research
Peer reviewedPugh, Kenneth R.; Mencl, W. Einar; Jenner, Annette R.; Katz, Leonard; Frost, Stephen J.; Lee, Jun Ren; Shaywitz, Sally E.; Shaywitz, Bennett A. – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2001
This article proposes a neurobiological account of reading and reading disability suggesting that for normally developing readers, the dorsal (tempo-parietal) circuit predominates at first, and in conjunction with premotor systems, is associated with analytic processing necessary for learning to integrate orthographic with phonological and…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Decoding (Reading), Dyslexia
Peer reviewedMinkoff, Scott R. B.; Raney, Gary E. – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2000
Compares explanations of letter-detection errors in the word "the" based on the unitization hypothesis (errors occur because the word is processed as a whole unit, and lower order processes are not completed) to the structural model of reading (errors occur because the syntactic function of the word pulls attention away from this word).…
Descriptors: Error Analysis (Language), Higher Education, Models, Reading Ability
Peer reviewedDavis-Haley, Rachel – Childhood Education, 2004
Text rendering is a method of deconstructing text that allows students to make decisions regarding the importance of the text, select the portions that are most meaningful to them, and then share it with classmates--all without fear of being ridiculed. The research on students constructing meaning from text is clear. In order for knowledge to…
Descriptors: Sentences, Reading Processes, Reader Text Relationship, Writing Processes
Paulson, Eric J. – Reading Research Quarterly, 2005
This theoretical article examines reading processes using chaos theory as an analogy. Three principles of chaos theory are identified and discussed, then related to reading processes as revealed through eye movement research. Used as an analogy, the chaos theory principle of sensitive dependence contributes to understanding the difficulty in…
Descriptors: Human Body, Reading Processes, Eye Movements, Physics
McNabb, M. L. – Journal of Research on Technology in Education, 2005
This article represents an attempt to begin a dialogue among the research community to identify what is known about using technology in various content areas. Although it does not present new empirical data, it does offer the reader one researcher's perspective on technology in literacy and language arts. The author discusses the effects of…
Descriptors: Language Arts, English, Educational Technology, Hypertext
Kurby, Christopher A.; Britt, M. Anne; Magliano, Joseph P. – Reading Psychology: An International Quarterly, 2005
This study examined the extent to which readers integrate information from related texts as a function of both top-down evaluation processes and bottom-up resonance. In Experiment 1, participants read and recalled ambiguous texts about events that were preceded by a descriptive text (primer) of the event. Participants' recall of the ambiguous…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Recall (Psychology), Reading Comprehension, Reading Processes
Bosman, Anna M. T.; Gompel, Marjolein; Vervloed, Mathijs P. J.; van Bon, Wim H. J. – Journal of Special Education, 2006
In this article, the authors compare the reading behavior of students with low vision to that of two groups of students with normal vision (reading-match and age-match students). In Experiment 1, students identified the first letter in words and nonwords and the researchers measured latency and accuracy. No group differences were found for…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Reading Processes, Reading Instruction, Visual Impairments
Wood, Karen D.; Endres, Clare – Reading Teacher, 2004
In order to make predictions about a text, students must have prior knowledge or experiences about the topic and a means or a reason to retrieve this latent information and knowledge. The Imagine, Elaborate, Predict, and Confirm (IEPC) strategy takes the predictive process back to its origins in the imagination and extends it throughout the…
Descriptors: Student Interests, Reading Strategies, Reading Processes, Reading Motivation
Rawson, Katherine A. – Cognitive Psychology, 2004
A prevalent assumption in text comprehension research is that many aspects of text processing are automatic, with automaticity typically defined in terms of properties (e.g., speed and effort). The present research advocates conceptualization of automaticity in terms of underlying mechanisms and evaluates two such accounts, a…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Word Processing, Sentence Structure, Concept Formation
Bertram, Raymond; Pollatsek, Alexander; Hyona, Jukka – Journal of Memory and Language, 2004
This eye movement study investigated the use of two types of segmentation cues in processing long Finnish compounds. The cues were related to the vowel quality properties of the constituents and properties of the consonant starting the second constituent. In Finnish, front vowels never appear with back vowels in a lexeme, but different quality…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Cues, Reading Processes, Finno Ugric Languages
Lee, Yang; Moreno, Miguel A.; Park, Hyeongsaeng; Carello, Claudia; Turvey, Michael T. – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2006
Are the visual word-processing tasks of naming and lexical decision sensitive to systematic phonological properties that may or may not be specified in the spelling? Two experiments with Hangul, the alphabetic orthography of Korea, were directed at the effects of the phonological process of assimilation whereby one articulation changes to conform…
Descriptors: Syllables, Vowels, Word Recognition, Foreign Countries
Blodgett, Allison; Boland, Julie E. – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2004
We conducted two word-by-word reading experiments to investigate the timing of implausibility detection for recipient and instrument prepositional phrases (PPs). These PPs differ in thematic role, relative frequency, and possibly in argument status. The results showed a difference in the timing of garden path effects such that the detection of…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Linguistic Theory, Phrase Structure, Syntax
Ecalle, Jean; Magnan, Annie – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2002
The processes involved in the processing of phonological information (awareness and phonological recoding) now occupy a key position in the study of the acquisition of reading. The research performed in the field of learning to read have helped support the idea that the learning of writing is based on the ability to develop a phonological…
Descriptors: Speech, Oral Language, Grade 1, Nursery Schools
Porat, Dan A. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2006
In this article, I present three students' and one parent's reading of an excerpt from a textbook on the Israeli-Arab conflict. The excerpt is an account of a skirmish between Jews and Arabs in 1920, symbolizing for Jews the first bloody encounter between the two sides. While all students read the same excerpt, they use different mechanisms in…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Conflict, Arabs, Jews

Direct link
