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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

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Moore, Dewayne; Lin-Agler, Lin; Zabrucky, Karen – Reading Psychology an international quarterly, 2005
In the present study we examined the basis of students' self-evaluations of comprehension performance. We manipulated text difficulty to maximize performance variability across reading trials and to minimize the likelihood of giving similar performance evaluations across trials. Students were allowed to acquire task (prior) experience across nine…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Performance Based Assessment
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Zabrucky, Karen; Moore, DeWayne – Reading Psychology, 1996
Assesses students' detection of lexical problems, falsehoods, and inconsistent textual information. Relates students' academic ranking to their evaluation performance for lexical and external consistency standards--not for internal consistency standards. Finds that alerting students to the necessity of using three standards to detect errors…
Descriptors: College Students, Higher Education, Metacognition, Reading Comprehension
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Zabrucky, Karen; And Others – Reading Psychology, 1985
Concludes that second graders' self-reports of comprehension and liking were highly related to the performance measure of error detection for good readers but not for poor ones. (FL)
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Comparative Analysis, Grade 2, Primary Education
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Zabrucky, Karen; Moore, Dewayne – Reading Psychology, 1991
Uses an error detection paradigm to examine the use of different standards of evaluation in younger and older adults who are skilled or less skilled at evaluating their understanding. Finds that skilled readers more often detect falsehoods and inconsistencies than nonsense words, whereas less skilled readers more often detect nonsense words and…
Descriptors: Adults, Error Patterns, Reading Processes, Reading Research