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Wu, Xiaoying; Anderson, Richard C. – Literacy Teaching and Learning, 2007
The purpose of this study was to examine the character identification strategies of Chinese children during their oral reading of a continuous text. Eighteen second graders' oral reading of a story, as well as an interview about their decoding strategies, were audiotaped and transcribed. The results generally converged with those of previous oral…
Descriptors: Reading Research, Oral Reading, Metalinguistics, Written Language
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Spiro, Rand J.; Anderson, Richard C. – American Educational Research Journal, 1981
Ausubel asserts that his work is impugned in various ways in Anderson, Spiro, and Anderson. This paper argues that a more careful reading of the original paper obviates most of Ausubel's concerns. (Author/GK)
Descriptors: Advance Organizers, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Learning Theories
Anderson, Richard C.; And Others – 1976
The present study investigated why it is that the more concrete the subject noun phrase of a sentence, the more likely the predicate is to be recalled when the subject noun phrase is the cue. The findings were that concretization dramatically influences both the probability of recognition of the subject noun phrase and the probability of recall of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Language Research, Memory, Models
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Reznitskaya, Alina; Anderson, Richard C.; Kuo, Li-Jen – Elementary School Journal, 2007
This study systematically analyzed social and cognitive processes that underlie the development of argumentative knowledge. Group discussions of controversial issues and explicit instruction in argumentation were expected to help students acquire a sense of the overall structure of an argument, or an argument schema. In a quasi-experiment, 128…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Grade 4, Grade 5, Writing (Composition)
Anderson, Richard C.; Pearson, P. David – 1984
To characterize basic processes of reading comprehension, this report focuses on how the reader's schemata, or knowledge already stored in memory, function in the process of interpreting new information and allowing it to enter and become a part of the knowledge store. The paper first traces the historical antecedents of schema theory, then…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Learning Theories, Prior Learning, Reading Comprehension
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Anderson, Richard C.; Ortony, Andrew – Cognitive Psychology, 1975
Comprehension of a sentence entails constructing a particularized and elaborated mental representation, and this process depends more heavily on knowledge of the world and analysis of context than is generally appreciated. Existing associative or semantic network theories would be strained to accomodate this data. (Author/BJG)
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Cognitive Processes, Context Clues, Higher Education
Anderson, Richard C.; And Others – 1976
Three experiments investigated the hypothesis that, when interpreted in context, general terms are typically encoded on the basis of an instantiation. The results indicated that a particular term naming the expected instantiation of a general term was a better cue for the recall of a sentence than the general term itself, even though the general…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Generalization, Language Research, Memory
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Anderson, Richard C.; And Others – Cognition and Instruction, 1997
Examined children's naturally occurring arguments sampled from transcripts of discussions in fourth-grade classrooms. Found that children's arguments had vague referring expressions, sometimes did not contain explicit conclusions, and seemed to lack explicit warrants to authorize conclusions. Missing or oblique information was usually given in the…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Processes, Deduction, Inferences
Anderson, Richard C. – 1982
One of the most consistent findings of research on discourse is that important text information is better learned than less important information because readers devote more attention to the important information. There is now very good reason to believe that questions cause readers to attend selectively to question-relevant information and that a…
Descriptors: Attention, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Discourse Analysis
Anderson, Richard C.; Pichert, James W. – 1977
College undergraduates read a story about two boys playing hooky from school from the perspective of either a burglar or a person interested in buying a home. After recalling the story once, subjects were directed to shift perspectives and then recall the story again. In two experiments, subjects produced on the second recall significantly more…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Literary Perspective, Memory
Anderson, Richard C.; And Others – 1977
Previous research has shown that adults tend to narrow the meanings of words encountered in context, a process that has been termed instantiation. In the present study, 60 first and fourth graders selected pictures which best represented the meanings of sentences read to them. The sets of pictures included three examples of a target word in each…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Context Clues, Elementary Education
Reynolds, Ralph E.; Anderson, Richard C. – 1980
When 77 college students were asked a certain type of question after every four pages of a 48-page oceanography text that they were reading, it was found that the text information relevant to questions was learned better than text information irrelevant to questions. Furthermore, reading times and probe reaction times on a secondary task were…
Descriptors: Attention, Attention Control, Cognitive Processes, College Students
Anderson, Richard C.; And Others – 1976
In this study, 30 male college students from two weightlifting classes and 30 female college students enrolled in an educational psychology course designed specifically for music education majors were asked to read two ambiguous passages, each of which could be interpreted in two different ways. The first passage could be perceived as describing…
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Background, Cognitive Processes, College Students
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Anderson, Richard C.; And Others – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1978
In this study 60 first and fourth graders selected pictures that best represented the meanings of sentences read to them. Results indicated that children were instantiating the target words with specific concepts rather than bringing to mind abstract, undifferentiated meanings. (HOD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Context Clues, Elementary Education
Anderson, Richard C.; Pichert, James W. – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1978
In these studies, people recalled additional, previously unrecalled information from stories following instruction to take a new perspective. The data clearly show the operation of retrieval processes independent from encoding processes. (SW)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cues, Language Processing, Language Research
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