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Showing 4,861 to 4,875 of 6,672 results
Peer reviewedWebb, Noreen M. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1984
This study investigated the stability over time of: (1) student behavior in small groups; and (2) the relationships among student and group characteristics, group interaction, and achievement. Measurements were taken for two three-week instructional units, three months apart, on 110 students in three average-ability junior high school mathematics…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Classroom Research, Ethnic Groups, Group Dynamics
Peer reviewedShort, Elizabeth Jane; Ryan, Ellen Bouchard – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1984
An intervention program, consisting of story grammar training and/or attribution training, was designed to remediate the failure of poor readers to use metacognitive skills. Using 42 fourth-grade poor readers in three different treatment groups, results showed strategic training produced dramatic gains in reading comprehension. (BS)
Descriptors: Aptitude Treatment Interaction, Attribution Theory, Comparative Analysis, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedBrattesani, Karen A.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1984
Students acquire information about their abilities by observing the differential treatment accorded high and low achievers. They then revise their own achievement expectations and perform according to the expectations perceived. This article reports the findings of two studies of elementary school reading classes that tested hypotheses derived…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Classroom Research, Elementary Education, Expectation
Peer reviewedRyan, Michael P. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1984
Individual differences in the reading comprehension standards of 90 undergraduates were examined. Students were classified as having a dualistic or relativistic conception of knowledge by attitude measures. Data suggest that epistemological beliefs may dictate choice of comprehension criteria and that these epistemological standards may control…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Style, College Students, Content Analysis
Peer reviewedTom, David Y. H.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1984
This study compared teacher expectations for academic performance and future occupational status of White and Asian elementary schoolchildren. The effects of sex, social class, and the level of teacher authoritarianism were also examined. Six fictional student record cards were the basis for predictions by 25 White elementary school teachers. (BS)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Asian Americans, Authoritarianism, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedPowers, Donald E.; Swinton, Spencer S. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1984
This experimental study was conducted to: (1) provide further information on the susceptibility to special preparation of three Graduate Record Examination analytical item types; (2) determine the efficacy of self-study test familiarization materials for these types; and (3) ascertain the effects of several different components of special…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, Graduate Study, Higher Education, Independent Study
Peer reviewedPaulman, Ronald G.; Kennelly, Kevin J. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1984
Exam-skilled, high-anxious college students performed comparably with skilled, low-anxious peers on the Raven Advanced Progressive Matrices, yet significantly worse on the concurrent backward Digit Span test. Conversely, high-anxious, unskilled subjects were exceeded by low-anxious, unskilled peers on both tasks. (Author/BW)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Performance Factors, Test Anxiety
Peer reviewedBergan, John R.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1984
Results from a study of 485 young children provided evidence that the development of counting skills is an evolving process in which parts of a relatively simple rule are replaced by features that enable the child to perform an increasingly broad range of counting tasks. (Author/BW)
Descriptors: Computation, Learning Processes, Mathematics Skills, Models
Peer reviewedGarner, Ruth; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1984
To investigate the order in which the components of the text-lookback strategy are acquired, 100 fifth-grade students were asked to tutor younger readers. The order of acquisition was as follows: undifferentiated rereading, text sampling, question differentiation, and text manipulation. (Author/BW)
Descriptors: Grade 5, Intermediate Grades, Models, Peer Teaching
Peer reviewedSiegel, Martin A.; Misselt, A. Lynn – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1984
A direct-instruction approach to computer-assisted instruction is proposed, with the corrective feedback paradigm. Features of the paradigm include adaptive feedback techniques with discrimination training and increasing ratio review. An experiment where 102 undergraduate students learned English-Japanese (transliterated) word pairs demonstrated…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Courseware, Drills (Practice), Feedback
Peer reviewedFry, P. S.; Addington, Jean – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1984
Two groups of children who had attended open and traditional classrooms, respectively, for three years were compared. Multivariate analyses of repeated measures showed that open-classroom subjects had higher scores in social problem-solving cognitions, self-esteem, and ego strength. (Author/BW)
Descriptors: Classroom Observation Techniques, Interpersonal Competence, Longitudinal Studies, Open Education
Peer reviewedBlaxall, Janet; Willows, Dale M. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1984
This study assessed the influence of reading ability and difficulty of material on types of oral reading errors made by 42 second-grade children. Overall, types of errors changed as the material became more difficult. The interactions between reading ability and difficulty level were also significant. (Author/BS)
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Difficulty Level, Error Patterns, Grade 2
Peer reviewedGitomer, Drew H.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1987
Processing of verbal analogies was evaluated by recording eye fixation patterns during solution of problems that represented a broad range of difficulty. Findings on easier problems replicated previous work. On difficult items, high verbal ability individuals adapted processing strategies to a greater extent then did low ability students.…
Descriptors: Analogy, Difficulty Level, Eye Fixations, Higher Education
Peer reviewedGuthrie, John T.; Kirsch, Irwin S. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1987
Reading tasks frequently performed by electronics engineers and technicians were identified and simulated with test items in four domains: (1) comprehending articles; (2) locating information in schematics; (3) locating information in articles; and (4) locating information in manuals. Factor analyses revealed two factors: comprehension and…
Descriptors: Adults, Electronic Technicians, Engineers, Reading Comprehension
Peer reviewedAssink, Egbert M. H. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1987
In a large-scale field experiment aimed at improving spelling instruction in Dutch schools, the effectiveness of a newly developed algorithmic teaching method was compared with the conventionally and commonly used analogy approach. The analogy group showed comparatively little progress in learning results. (Seventy-five test items are appended).…
Descriptors: Algorithms, Analogy, Dutch, Foreign Countries


