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No Child Left Behind Act 20013
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Hafner, Lawrence E.; Palmer, Barbara C. – Journal of Educational Research, 1980
Two successful teaching strategies for improving students' reading comprehension, vocabulary, and speed of reading comprehension are the MRM method (identifying sentence kernels) and the LOGANAR method (logically analyzing cognitive relationships). (CJ)
Descriptors: Kernel Sentences, Reading Comprehension, Reading Improvement, Reading Processes
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Brown, James I.; McDowell, Earl E. – Reading Improvement, 1979
Reports that students in a college reading efficiency course who had high self-images read significantly faster than those with low self-images, that students with initially high self-images did not maintain those images, that males had higher self-images and read faster than did females, and that there were negative relationships between speed…
Descriptors: Females, Higher Education, Males, Reading Achievement
Schaffer, William O.; LaBerge, David – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1979
Two experiments were conducted to test how readers process unattended words in a display and how the semantic category of these flanking words affects response time. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Language Research, Psycholinguistics, Reading Processes
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Trent, S. D.; Truan, M. B. – Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, 1997
A study of 30 adolescent Braille readers at the Tennessee School for the Blind found the most important factor related to Braille reading speed was age at onset of blindness. No direct relationships were found between reading speed and comprehension or reading speed and reading for pleasure in Braille. (Author/CR)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Age, Blindness, Braille
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Breznitz, Zvia – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1997
Results of a study with 52 dyslexic children and 52 normal readers show that reading acceleration through computer-controlled reading rates improves reading performance in both groups, but auditory masking by playing a song is beneficial only to the dyslexic children. Implications are discussed in terms of phonological processing. (SLD)
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli, Children, Computer Uses in Education
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Crawford, Lindy; Tindal, Gerald; Stieber, Steve – Educational Assessment, 2001
Used a curriculum-based measurement (CBM) of reading aloud from narrative passages to predict performance on statewide achievement tests in reading and mathematics. Results for 51 students (third graders in the second year of the study) provide initial support for the use of timed oral readings to predict students' performance on statewide…
Descriptors: Achievement, Curriculum, Elementary School Students, Oral Reading
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Rasinski, Timothy V. – Journal of Educational Research, 1990
Findings from a study which compared methods for improving students' (N=20) reading fluency indicate: (1) both repeated readings and listening-while-reading treatments were effective in improving reading fluency and, (2) neither treatment was superior to the other in improving reading fluency. (IAH)
Descriptors: Grade 3, Primary Education, Reading Fluency, Reading Improvement
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Harrison, Sister Frances – British Journal of Visual Impairment, 1987
Described are methods of teaching braille to adolescents recently become blind, emphasizing the uniqueness of the individual, characteristics of the individual based on the cause of the blindness, possible resistance to learning braille while some vision remains, selection of appropriate training materials, and techniques for building up speed in…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adventitious Impairments, Blindness, Braille
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O'Reilly, Robert P.; Walker, James E. – Reading Research and Instruction, 1990
Examines selected research showing how the components of human information processing limit reading rates. Suggests that speed reading is impossible when the intent is to understand the message communicated by the text. Discusses limiting factors in processes of word recognition, working memory, and comprehension. Discusses evaluative and…
Descriptors: College Students, Postsecondary Education, Reading Comprehension, Reading Instruction
Dwyer, Edward J.; West, Russell F. – Forum for Reading, 1989
Investigates whether a freshman reading improvement training program will produce gains in reading rate (normal reading rate, not skimming). Finds positive results for the program. (SR)
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Reading Comprehension, Reading Improvement, Reading Instruction
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Kelly, Leonard P. – Perspectives in Education and Deafness, 1994
A study with 18 deaf high school students found that skills that actually contribute to reading proficiency included use of prior text information, prior knowledge, reading speed and consistency, use of active memory for function words and inflections, and correct processing of relative clauses and the passive voice. Instructional implications are…
Descriptors: Deafness, Grammar, High Schools, Prior Learning
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Thornton, Mary M. – Reading Improvement, 1992
Describes an advanced reading course at Mississippi State University that is designed to increase vocabulary, comprehension, and reading rate. Notes that unteaching reading habits necessary to beginner's instruction is a large part of increasing students' effective reading rate. Presents student performance statistics. (RS)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Reading Comprehension
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Nasland, Jan Carol; Schneider, Wolfgang – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 1991
Describes a German longitudinal study of the relationship among verbal ability, memory capacity, phonological awareness, and reading performance. Reports that the relationship between memory capacity and phonological awareness remained stable over time. Concludes that memory capacity predicted phonological awareness task performance, phonological…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Foreign Countries, Longitudinal Studies, Memory
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Bowers, Patricia Greig – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1993
Examines factors related to the slower reading of text by reading-disabled compared to average readers. Finds phonological awareness and digit-naming speed consistently related to speed and errors on initial reading and on reading for a fourth time. Finds an independent relationship between phonemic sensitivity and fluency. (RS)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Elementary Education, Longitudinal Studies, Predictor Variables
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Rasinski, Timothy V. – Reading Psychology, 1999
Determines grade-level reading rates for third- and fifth-grade students as well as reading rates that correspond to independent, instructional, and frustration reading levels as determined through informal reading-inventory procedures. Suggests that availability of reading-level-rate norms can assist reading diagnosticians in evaluating the…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Grade 3, Grade 5, Reading Achievement
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