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Dong, Ting; Anderson, Richard C.; Kim, Il-Hee; Li, Yuan – Reading Research Quarterly, 2008
Students at two sites in China and one site in Korea engaged in Collaborative Reasoning, an approach to discussion that requires self-management, free participation, and critical thinking. The discontinuity between the usual adult-dominated discourse of Chinese and Korean homes and classrooms and the expected discourse of Collaborative Reasoning…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Instructional Effectiveness, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis
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Anderson, Richard C.; And Others – Reading Research Quarterly, 1988
Investigates the relationship of out-of-school activities to reading achievement. Finds a wide variation between children in amount of out-of-school reading. Concludes that reading books was the out-of-school activity that had the strongest association with reading proficiency, but that on most days most subjects did little or no book reading. (MM)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Grade 5, Independent Reading, Reading Achievement
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Anderson, Richard C.; And Others – Reading Research Quarterly, 1984
Concludes the following: an emphasis on meaning produces better sentence recall than an emphasis on accurate oral reading; in groups receiving an accurate reading emphasis sentence recall depends upon instructional time; the child taking an active turn remembers more sentences from lesson than the children following along; and the interestingness…
Descriptors: Grade 3, Grouping (Instructional Purposes), Primary Education, Reading Comprehension
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Freebody, Peter; Anderson, Richard C. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1983
Reports that results of two experiments designed to assess the effects of text cohesion and schema availability on children's comprehension of social studies passages that varied in vocabulary difficulty failed to support expectations based on the interactive theory of reading. (FL)
Descriptors: Cohesion (Written Composition), Content Analysis, Elementary Education, Learning Theories
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Shu, Hua; Anderson, Richard C. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1997
Finds that third and fifth graders were able to select characters containing the correct radicals (a component of Chinese characters that provides information about the character's meaning) even when the characters as a whole were unfamiliar to them. Finds that good readers displayed more awareness of radicals than poor readers. (RS)
Descriptors: Chinese, Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education
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Anderson, Richard C.; And Others – Reading Research Quarterly, 1991
Compares teaching emphasizing story meaning (major plot elements) with teaching emphasizing surface features of language (word analysis and accurate reading). Finds an emphasis on story meaning led to superior performance on an array of outcome measures. Finds differences especially notable for children in low and average reading groups. (SR)
Descriptors: Grade 3, Instructional Effectiveness, Primary Education, Reading Improvement
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Nagy, William E.; Anderson, Richard C. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1984
Concludes that there are about 88,500 words in printed school English and that even systematic direct vocabulary instruction could not account for a significant proportion of all the words children actually learn, nor cover more than a modest proportion of the words they will encounter in school reading materials. (FL)
Descriptors: Child Language, Computational Linguistics, Elementary Education, Language Usage
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Wilkinson, Ian A. G.; Anderson, Richard C. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1995
Investigates effects of silent reading embedded in small-group lessons typical of much classroom reading instruction. Finds both positive and negative effects--students were more attentive during silent reading and were more responsive to story content than during oral reading, but the slower pace of silent reading offset these benefits. (RS)
Descriptors: Grade 3, Instructional Effectiveness, Primary Education, Reading Instruction
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Chinn, Clark A.; Anderson, Richard C.; Waggoner, Martha A. – Reading Research Quarterly, 2001
Considers if it is possible for fourth-grade teachers and their students to implement Collaborative Reasoning, an instructional frame that transfers much of the control over discourse to students, during their reading lessons. Shows that the teachers and students were generally successful at implementing the new instructional frame. (SG)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Discussion Groups, Grade 4, Instructional Effectiveness