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Roberts, Judith C.; Roberts, Keith A. – Teaching Sociology, 2008
Reading comprehension skill is often assumed by sociology instructors, yet many college students seem to have marginal reading comprehension skills, which may explain why fewer than half of them are actually doing the reading. Sanctions that force students to either read or to pay a price are based on a rational choice model of behavior--a…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Reading Skills, Reading Strategies, Learner Engagement
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Moore, David W. – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2008
Times are exciting for adolescent literacy research! Researchers are examining adolescents' reading and writing like never before. This department, Research Connections, spotlights scholarly efforts aimed at improving classroom literacy instruction for adolescent learners. It takes a broad, disciplined-inquiry view of research, embracing…
Descriptors: Action Research, Literacy, Program Development, Reading Skills
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Starns, Jeffrey J.; Lane, Sean M.; Alonzo, Jill D.; Roussel, Cristine C. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2007
According to signal detection theory (SDT), retrieval warnings may decrease false memory in the associative list paradigm either by inducing a conservative criterion shift or by decreasing the amount of evidence that critical theme words were studied. Fitting a SDT model to 12 existing datasets revealed suggestive evidence that warnings impact…
Descriptors: Models, Memory, Reading Skills, Information Retrieval
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Baker, Bernadette – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2007
In this paper, the author sidles up to the "problema" of identifying children as having a learning disability (LD) in the USA to ascertain what an analysis of limping characters, limping readers and limping rhythms might teach individuals about justice. In much current educational literature children labelled LD circulate as "maimed individuals"…
Descriptors: Gifted, Learning Disabilities, Identification, Justice
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Field, John – ELT Journal, 2007
Too much thinking and research views learner autonomy in an instruction-centred way, with a focus on equipping the learner to function better in the classroom or learning centre. This article argues that true learner empowerment consists of the freedom to learn outside the teaching context and the ability to continue learning after instruction has…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Reading Skills, English (Second Language), Listening Skills
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Jacobs, Vicki A. – Harvard Educational Review, 2008
In this article, Vicki Jacobs argues that as the nation strives to improve the literacy achievement of U.S. adolescents, educators must reframe the current "crisis" as a critical point on a continuum of historical efforts to address the particular challenges of postprimary-grade reading. Specifically, Jacobs examines the definition of adolescent…
Descriptors: Reading Consultants, Literacy, Adolescents, Reading Skills
Hirsch, E. D., Jr. – WestEd, 2008
"Policy Perspectives" presents visiting authors' own views and/or research on issues relevant to schools and communities nationwide. The idea that reading skill is largely a set of general-purpose maneuvers that can be applied to any and all texts is one of the main barriers to our children's overall low achievement in reading, argues…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Federal Legislation, Educational Philosophy, Low Achievement
Yu, Hong-qin – Online Submission, 2007
"TBT" means "task-based teaching". In a TBT class, students play the central role. In the class where students are provided with plenty of chances to be engaged in activities, the teacher is more like a patient listener rather than a talkative speaker. This paper mainly explores how task-based teaching is used in English reading class.
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Teaching Methods, English Instruction, Second Language Instruction
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Greenleaf, Cynthia L.; Hinchman, Kathleen – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2009
This commentary invites Americans to confront what these authors view as the travesty that typically passes for literacy instruction for older youth in the United States who struggle with reading. In too many U.S. schools, these young people face an impoverished curriculum, receiving literacy instruction that is ill suited to their needs, or…
Descriptors: Literacy Education, Reading Difficulties, Secondary School Curriculum, Teaching Methods
Hargis, Charles H. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2006
Standards are often set by what teachers think students should know on the curriculum assigned to each of the grades. However, there are more unintended consequences of setting grade-level standards. Some students enter a grade already exceeding the grade-level standards; others enter a grade without having reached the standards of previous…
Descriptors: Standard Setting, Grades (Scholastic), Reading Achievement, Biology
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Protopapas, Athanassios; Archonti, Anastasia; Skaloumbakas, Christos – Cognitive Psychology, 2007
Stroop interference is often taken as evidence for reading automaticity even though young and poor readers, who presumably lack reading automaticity, present strong interference. Here the relationship between reading skills and Stroop interference was studied in a 7th-grade sample. Greater interference was observed in children diagnosed with…
Descriptors: Psychology, Language Skills, Word Processing, Reading Ability
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Skinner, Christopher H. – School Psychology Review, 2008
Nist and Joseph (2008) have confirmed earlier research showing that adding and interspersing a large number of time-consuming learning trials targeting known items (e.g., incremental rehearsal (IR) or interspersal) retards student learning rates. In addition, their current study has confirmed earlier research that adding and interspersing known…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Intervention, Behavior Change, Instructional Materials
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Gee, Constance Bumgarner – Arts Education Policy Review, 2007
Profound differences exist between the ways in which arts educators and artists personally value the arts and the rationales offered via arts advocacy campaigns for public arts support. The author argues that those discrepancies carry grave consequences for K-university arts education. The author describes means by which to better reconcile…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, Justice, Economic Development, Art Education
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Schwartz, Adam; Rubinstein-Avila, Eliane – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2006
The authors introduce manga to educators, inspired by the comics' explosive entry into U.S. popular culture. The word "manga" refers specifically to printed, Japanese-style comics found in graphic-novel format--not to be confused with "anime" (animated Japanese cartoons, including moving images on television, movies, video…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Reading Materials, Literacy, Popular Culture
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Pauk, Walter – Reading World, 1980
Argues that applying the rhythm of speech to print will lead to improved oral and silent reading. (FL)
Descriptors: Intonation, Reading Improvement, Reading Skills, Teaching Methods
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