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Johns, Jerry L. – Reading Improvement, 1971
Descriptors: Adult Students, Basic Vocabulary, Evaluation Methods, Measurement Instruments
Knight, David W.; Bethune, Paul – Florida Reading Quart, 1970
Descriptors: Context Clues, Individualized Instruction, Instructional Program Divisions, Readability
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Salager, Francoise – Reading in a Foreign Language, 1983
A statistical study of 100,000 words from medical English literature to determine the core lexis of medicine across specialties is reported. It is suggested that both the research procedure and the results are applicable to instruction in reading medical English for professional purposes. (MSE)
Descriptors: English (Second Language), English for Special Purposes, Lexicology, Medical Vocabulary
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Warrington, Elizabeth K. – British Journal of Psychology, 1981
An experimental investigation of a single patient with an acquired dyslexia in which there was a significant impairment in his ability to read concrete words compared with abstract words is reported. The Brown and Ure word-lists used in the study are appended. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Adventitious Impairments, Case Studies, Dyslexia
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Bilsky, Linda Hickson; And Others – Intelligence, 1982
A multi-session training approach attempted to teach mildly retarded adolescents to discover and utilize categorical list structure. Recall transfer with new word lists was demonstrated. Differences in use of categorization strategies by normal and retarded adolescents were interpreted in terms of the automatic controlled processing distinction.…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Cues, Experimental Groups, High Schools
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Wetherick, N. E.; And Others – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 1979
Word lists were given to 176 Scottish children, ages 15, 11, 8, and 6. Analysis of variance on recall scores indicated that Jensen's findings of greater recall by middle class children may be only a transitory phenomenon, not evidence of permanent middle class superiority in Level II ability. (Editor/SJL)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Classification, Elementary School Students, Lower Class Students
Kolers, Paul A.; Gonzalez, Esther – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory, 1980
Synonyms within languages were compared with exact repetition of words as aids to recall. Interlingual synonyms had effects identical to those of exact repetition, whereas intralingual synonyms were less effective than exact repetition. Bilingual equivalence of words does not appear to be due to common underlying semantic structures. (Author/RD)
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Cognitive Processes, English, Foreign Countries
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Engle, Randall W.; Nagle, Richard J. – Intelligence, 1979
Mildly retarded children were instructed in encoding strategies or rehearsal strategy. Performance was higher for semantic encoding strategies. Seven months later the semantic condition also showed greater improvement after strategies were prompted. Performance on incidental learning tasks was enhanced for 13- but not 10-year olds. (Author/RD)
Descriptors: Cluster Grouping, Educational Strategies, Intermediate Grades, Learning Processes
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Glushko, Robert J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1979
Results refute current claims that words are read aloud by retrieving a single pronunciation from memory and that pseudowords are pronounced by using abstract spelling-to-sound rules. Instead, it appears that words and pseudowords are pronounced using similar kinds of orthographic and phonological knowledge. (Author/CP)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Oral Reading, Orthographic Symbols, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
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Johnston, William A.; Heinz, Steven F. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1979
The effect of the sensory discriminability of targets from nontargets on depth of nontarget processing was examined. Depth of nontarget processing was measured by semantic overlap between targets and nontargets, reaction time, and nontarget recall. Depth of processing decreased as sensory discriminability increased, supporting multiple-loci…
Descriptors: Attention, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Incidental Learning
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Foss, Margaret; Stensvold, Mark – Journal of Research and Development in Education, 1994
Researchers revised a psychological assessment of organization in memory to measure organization in thinking. Secondary students viewed a videotape, wrote essays, then created word trees using provided words that eliminated the memory component in their original task. The ordered-tree technique reliably measured organization in thinking.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Evaluation Methods, High School Students, Memory
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Durso, Francis T.; Coggins, Kathy A. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1991
Performance on a battery of tests of vocabulary words by 72 college students was compared as a function of whether the prior instruction involved presenting material in an organized or scrambled fashion. Organizing vocabulary words during study facilitated performance in categorizing, processing for understanding, or producing a word. (SLD)
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Processes, College Students, Definitions
Brown, Dorothy F. – Guidelines: A Periodical for Classroom Language Teachers, 1988
A discussion of vocabulary development for intermediate and advanced students preparing for the Australian certification test for Teaching English as a Foreign Language focuses on nine areas: collocations, clines, clusters, cloze procedures, context, consultation or checking, cards, creativity, and guessing. (seven references) (LB)
Descriptors: Cloze Procedure, Context Clues, English (Second Language), Foreign Countries
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Coxhead, Averil – TESOL Quarterly, 2000
Describes the development and evaluation of a new academic word list that was completed from a corpus of 3.5 million running words of written academic text by examining the range and frequency of words outside the first 2,000 most frequently occurring words in English. Explains the problems with existing word lists intended to guide materials…
Descriptors: Computational Linguistics, English, English for Academic Purposes, Instructional Materials
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Low, Graham – Applied Linguistics, 1996
Examines data from a think-aloud study and explores how randomly selected undergraduates react to "extreme" intensifiers and hedges. Results indicate that think-aloud data can within limits provide valid evidence of attention to specific words, and that there is a need to distinguish between attending to a word and using it to formulate…
Descriptors: Adverbs, Affective Behavior, Associative Learning, Attention Control
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