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Halpin, Gerald; And Others – 1987
A study involving 18 boys and 20 girls attending Grade 1 in a rural elementary school was conducted to determine if a program designed to develop test-taking skills would result in higher standardized achievement test scores than would one focusing on the content assessed by the test. Each student was assigned to one of two groups and administered…
Descriptors: Grade 1, Primary Education, Standardized Tests, Test Coaching
Markel, Geraldine; And Others – Academic Therapy, 1985
Students with learning disabilities can prepare for the SATs (Stanford Achievement Tests) by (1) counseling sessions to discuss college prerequisites and pre-admission tests; (2) taking more academic courses or procuring necessary remedial help; (3) school personnel identifying and correcting skill weaknesses; and (4) discussing abuses and uses of…
Descriptors: Counseling Techniques, Learning Disabilities, Secondary Education, Standardized Tests

Scruggs, Thomas E.; Lifson, Steve – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1986
Two experiments compared the ability of learning disabled (LD) students and more typical age peers to answer such reading comprehension questions presented independently of reading passages. Results suggested a relative deficiency on the part of LD students with respect to reasoning strategies and test-taking skills. (Author/LMO)
Descriptors: Grade 3, Learning Disabilities, Primary Education, Reading Comprehension

Scruggs, Thomas E.; And Others – Elementary School Journal, 1985
Reports an investigation of 31 elementary school students' strategies in answering reading questions from the Stanford Achievement Tests. Results demonstrated that students do employ specific strategies and suggested that test results can be improved by teaching students to attend to all distractors, refer to the reading passage, answer all…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Interviews, Oral Reading

Scruggs, Thomas E.; Mastropieri, Margo A. – Exceptional Children, 1986
Learning disabled and behaviorally disordered third and fourth grade students were taught test taking skills such as attending to appropriate stimuli, marking answers carefully, using time well, and avoiding errors. These students scored significantly higher than their untrained peers on the Word Study Skills subtest of the Stanford Achievement…
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Behavior Disorders, Elementary Education, Learning Disabilities
Taylor, Cie; White, Karl R. – 1981
To examine the influence of test wiseness and motivation on Title I students' performance in group standardized tests, the effects of training students and teachers in testing skills and reinforcing student testing behavior were investigated during the administration of the Stanford Achievement Test, Level II, to 597 students. Students were…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Analysis of Variance, Compensatory Education, Grade 2
Scruggs, Thomas E.; Lifson, Steve – 1984
The ability to correctly answer reading comprehension test items, without having read the accompanying reading passage, was compared for third grade learning disabled students and their peers from a regular classroom. In the first experiment, fourteen multiple choice items were selected from the Stanford Achievement Test. No reading passages were…
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Elementary School Students, Grade 3, Guessing (Tests)