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White, Sheida; Chen, Jing; Forsyth, Barbara – Journal of Literacy Research, 2010
This article presents data on the types and duration of reading-related activities reported by a volunteer sample of 400 adults (demographically similar to the U.S. adult population age 20 and older in terms of race, ethnicity, education, and working status) in the 2005 Real-World Tasks Study. This diary study revealed that adults spent, on…
Descriptors: Reading Materials, Adult Literacy, Prose, Recreational Reading
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Lemarie, Julie; Lorch, Robert F., Jr.; Eyrolle, Helene; Virbel, Jacques – Educational Psychologist, 2008
We propose a two-component theory of text signaling devices. The first component is a text-based analysis that characterizes any signaling device along four dimensions: (a) the type of information it makes available, (b) its scope, (c) how it is realized in the text, and (d) its location with respect to the content it cues. The second component is…
Descriptors: Cues, Cognitive Processes, Prose, Word Processing
Sartorius, Tara Cady – Arts & Activities, 2009
They say first impressions can be deceiving. The difficulty of getting to know someone increases when that person is mostly fictional. Whatever the author writes is all readers can know. Whatever they read about the character is all they have to go on. Now take it another step back, and imagine a portrait drawing, painting or print of that…
Descriptors: Portraiture, Poetry, Prose, Visual Arts
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Zahnd, Whitney E.; Scaife, Steven L.; Francis, Mark L. – American Journal of Health Behavior, 2009
Objective: To determine whether health literacy is lower in rural populations. Method: We analyzed health, prose, document, and quantitative literacy from the National Assessment of Adult Literacy study. Metropolitan Statistical Area designated participants as rural or urban. Results: Rural populations had lower literacy levels for all literacy…
Descriptors: Rural Population, Numeracy, Adult Literacy, Prose
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Kang, Sonia K.; Chasteen, Alison L. – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 2009
Although research has shown that older adults are negatively affected by aging stereotypes, relatively few studies have attempted to identify those older adults who may be especially susceptible to these effects. The current research takes steps toward identifying older adults most susceptible to the effects of stereotype threat and investigates…
Descriptors: Aging (Individuals), Stereotypes, Older Adults, Well Being
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Stewart, Christopher C.; Griffith, H. Randall; Okonkwo, Ozioma C.; Martin, Roy C.; Knowlton, Robert K.; Richardson, Elizabeth J.; Hermann, Bruce P.; Seidenberg, Michael – Brain and Cognition, 2009
Recent theories have posited that the hippocampus and thalamus serve distinct, yet related, roles in episodic memory. Whereas the hippocampus has been implicated in long-term memory encoding and storage, the thalamus, as a whole, has been implicated in the selection of items for subsequent encoding and the use of retrieval strategies. However,…
Descriptors: Epilepsy, Injuries, Patients, Rote Learning
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Moser, Janet – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2008
Rhetorically challenging literature can be made to serve the purposes of first-year composition in new ways. Excerpts from the novels of Marcel Proust that focus on the author's characteristic scrutinizing, reflexive attention to style work successfully as models for assisting writers in acquiring the habits of reading and re-reading, and of…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Writing (Composition), Novels, Prose
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O'Brien, Tom – Arts Education Policy Review, 2007
In this essay, the author asks, "What can the romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley teach us about arts education today?" In Shelley's time, no one was yet worried about improving math, reading, or SAT scores. Nevertheless, there was an implication in the rise of the sciences that educators were even then beginning to confront: What, some…
Descriptors: Art Education, Advocacy, Poets, Prose
Tunnel, Michael O.; Jacobs, James S. – School Library Journal, 2007
This article features Lloyd Alexander, an author who has produced some of the most elegant and powerful prose in the history of modern children's literature. Lloyd began writing seriously in high school, and though he wrote and submitted many poems and short stories, his only success was being named a finalist in the "Writer's Digest" Short Story…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Awards, Fantasy, Literary Genres
McKenna, Gregory S. – Human Resources and Skills Development Canada, 2010
The primary purpose of this report is to explore within the Canadian context the relationship between Self-Reported Learning Disabilities (SRLD) and low literacy performance using the Canadian portion of the public data set from the 2003 International Adult Literacy and Life Skills Survey (IALSS). Two primary research questions related to SRLD…
Descriptors: Intervention, Remedial Reading, Learning Disabilities, Foreign Countries
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Butler, Andrew C.; Karpicke, Jeffrey D.; Roediger, Henry L., III – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2007
Two experiments investigated how the type and timing of feedback influence learning from a multiple-choice test. First, participants read 12 prose passages, which covered various general knowledge topics (e.g., The Sun) and ranged between 280 and 300 words in length. Next, they took an initial six-alternative, multiple-choice test on information…
Descriptors: Test Items, Multiple Choice Tests, Prose, Test Results
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Meekums, Bonnie – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2008
This autoethnographic study addresses the newly appointed counselling trainer's question "How did I get here?" The procedure is described, and findings are presented as partial narratives of the Wounded Dancer, poems and prose written from different voices. Themes are revealed of love, healing, risk taking, unconventionality, physicality and…
Descriptors: Dance, Parent Role, Fathers, Counselor Training
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Smith, M. Cecil; Smith, Thomas J. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2010
The present study examined data from a large, nationally representative sample--the National Assessment of Adult Literacy (NCES, 2007)--to examine how computer use and Internet-based literacy practices (use of e-mail, searching for information on the Internet, and Internet chatting) were related to prose, document, and quantitative literacy…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Numeracy, Computers, Adult Literacy
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Cooper, David E. – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 1983
Two papers by Haim Gordon and Keith Jenkins (Journal of Philosophy of Education; v14 p181-92 and v16 p251-54) which interpret the educational views of Nietzsche are critiqued. (SR)
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Prose
Ngwudike, Benjamin C. – Online Submission, 2008
The 2003 National Assessment of Adult Literacy (NAAL): Performance of African Americans in a National Context Sponsored by the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) the 2003 NAAL was America's most comprehensive assessment of adult literacy since the 1992 National Adult Literacy Survey (NALS). NAAL was a nationally representative…
Descriptors: Adult Literacy, Inferences, Prose, African Americans
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