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Peer reviewedWade, Suzanne E.; Buxton, William M.; Kelly, Michelle – Reading Research Quarterly, 1999
Finds and describes five text characteristics that are most positively associated with interest in expository text, and three most negatively associated. Shows that interest and importance were highly correlated, and that information rated as both interesting and important was recalled best. (SR)
Descriptors: Expository Writing, Higher Education, Protocol Analysis, Reader Text Relationship
Peer reviewedGoswami, Usha; Mead, Felicity – Reading Research Quarterly, 1992
Examines the effects of onset and rime awareness on children's recognition of spelling patterns in written words. Reports that onset-rime awareness was associated with word ending similarities, whereas word beginning analogies appeared to involve higher-level phonological skills. Suggests longitudinal research regarding the issue. (SG)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Phonemes, Phonology
Peer reviewedCarver, Ronald P. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1992
Examines previous studies of the effects of prediction activities, prior knowledge, and text type upon reading comprehension. Finds the three elements unimportant to ordinary reading. Observes that many schema theory concepts arose from analysis of difficult reading. Suggests that the schema theory variables may arise only in atypical reading…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Memorization, Prediction, Prior Learning
Peer reviewedUhry, Joanna K.; Shepherd, Margaret Jo – Reading Research Quarterly, 1993
Notes that experimental subjects were trained to segment and spell phonetically regular words, whereas controls were trained to read letters, words, and text. Finds that trained subjects made significant gains and were better than controls at posttest in measures of reading nonsense words, real words, and oral passages, but not of silent reading…
Descriptors: Grade 1, Instructional Effectiveness, Primary Education, Reading Comprehension
Peer reviewedMeyer, Bonnie J. F.; And Others – Reading Research Quarterly, 1993
Presents a model to predict readability of documents encountered by older adults. Finds a correlation of 0.54 between the readability scores for test items predicted by the model and the percentage of older adults correctly answering those items. Finds that more difficult test items were correlated more highly with fluid intelligence abilities,…
Descriptors: Correlation, Models, Older Adults, Predictor Variables
Peer reviewedWade, Suzanne E.; And Others – Reading Research Quarterly, 1993
Investigates how interest and importance interact to affect the strategy use and recall of skilled readers. Finds that readers acted strategically, except when they encountered seductive details: subjects spent a great deal of time on seductive details, even though they considered them highly memorable and unimportant. (RS)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Reading Comprehension, Reading Research, Reading Strategies
Peer reviewedPellegrini, A. D.; Galda, Lee – Reading Research Quarterly, 1993
Discusses the roles of Piagetian and Vygotskyan theories. Reviews longitudinal naturalistic and experimental research on symbolic play's role in literacy development. Finds a limited role of adults in symbolic play and oral language production and that children's use of language to talk about language while interacting with peers is important in…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Early Childhood Education, Emergent Literacy, Literature Reviews
Peer reviewedShannon, Patrick – Reading Research Quarterly, 1993
Attempts to clarify the social concepts and reality of rationalization and deskilling as they apply to the teaching of reading in U.S. elementary schools and how the teaching of reading connects with the social structure and students' and teachers' lives in and beyond the classroom. (RS)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Reading Instruction, Reading Programs, Social Influences
Peer reviewedWest, Richard F.; And Others – Reading Research Quarterly, 1993
Finds that individuals judged to be high in print exposure displayed more extensive vocabularies and cultural knowledge than those with low print exposure, even after differences in age and education were controlled. Suggests a more prominent role for print exposure in theories of individual differences in cognitive development. (RS)
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Processes, Correlation, Individual Differences
Peer reviewedFeitelson, Dina; And Others – Reading Research Quarterly, 1993
Investigates whether listening to stories in literary Arabic would have salutary effects on kindergarten children's emergent literacy skills. Finds that children in the experimental classes outperformed control classes on comprehension and active use of language. Concludes that children can acquire a second register through exposure in school…
Descriptors: Arabic, Beginning Reading, Diglossia, Early Childhood Education
Peer reviewedReutzel, D. Ray; And Others – Reading Research Quarterly, 1994
Measures the effects of two oral reading instructional routines (the Oral Recitation Lesson and Shared Book Experience) on second-grade students' reading development (including word analysis skills, oral reading errors, self-correction rates, oral retellings, vocabulary gains, and fluency). Finds that the Shared Book Experience was superior or…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Grade 2, Instructional Effectiveness, Oral Reading
Peer reviewedPring, Linda – Reading Research Quarterly, 1994
Reports on a congenitally blind young girl who learned to read Braille. Suggests that phonological awareness can be well developed even without word or letter experience, and the logographic phase of reading can be bypassed in favor of an alphabetic phase. Notes that her level of skill is similar to that of sighted children. (RS)
Descriptors: Blindness, Braille, Primary Education, Reading Achievement
Peer reviewedBloome, David; Egan-Robertson, Ann – Reading Research Quarterly, 1993
Discusses theoretical constructs defining intertextuality as a social construction. Presents a microanalysis of a first-grade reading lesson based on recent work applying interactional sociolinguistics to classrooms. Shows how teachers and students may use intertextuality to (1) define themselves and others; (2) form social groups; and (3)…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Classroom Research, Constructivism (Learning), Grade 1
Peer reviewedSenechal, Monique; Cornell, Edward H. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1993
Assesses whether preschool children learn new vocabulary from a single reading of a storybook and whether certain conversational devices used by parents during joint book reading facilitate vocabulary growth. Finds that, although receptive vocabulary learning was robust, there was no evidence of differential learning of vocabulary under different…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Preschool Education, Reading Aloud to Others, Reading Research
Peer reviewedKlingner, Janette Kettmann – Reading Research Quarterly, 1993
Discusses flaws that undermine the validity and generalizability of S. Neuman and P. Koskinen's "Captioned Television as Comprehensible Input: Effects of Incidental Word Learning from Context for Language Minority Students," published in an earlier issue of this journal. (RS)
Descriptors: Bilingual Students, Junior High Schools, Language Acquisition, Reading Comprehension


