NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Education Consolidation…2
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Showing 16 to 30 of 269 results Save | Export
Demers, David Pearce – 1993
Employing the community attachment model, a study hypothesized that the greater the personal experiences in and the greater the attachments to a community, the greater the reading of the local newspaper. The primary logic is that social ties and feelings of attachment generate needs for information that can be satisfied through reading of the…
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Higher Education, Information Sources, Reading Attitudes
McCombs, Maxwell E.; And Others – 1988
A study investigated whether three types of journalistic material--news stories, news articles, and news reports--could be reliably distinguished from one another, and whether these genres had differential appeal to audiences. News reports are defined as succinct reports of facts, while news articles represent a more analytic form of reporting,…
Descriptors: Media Research, Newspapers, Reader Response, Reader Text Relationship
Flynn, Elizabeth A. – 1980
Twenty-six women and 26 men enrolled in a humanities course at Michigan Technological University wrote their initial impressions to short stories by James Joyce, James Baldwin, Doris Lessing, and Virginia Woolf. The names were removed and the journal entries were analyzed in light of these four questions: (1) Do women refer to their personal…
Descriptors: Females, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Literature Appreciation
Whitney, Patricia – 1991
A study investigated the relationship between locus of control and intrinsically motivated reading for children. The entire sixth grade, totalling 53 students, of a parochial school in San Francisco was administered the Children's Nowicki-Strickland Internal-External Control Scale. A free-choice paperback reading rack provided the measure for…
Descriptors: Grade 6, Independent Reading, Intermediate Grades, Locus of Control
PDF pending restoration PDF pending restoration
Flippo, Rona F.; Hetzel, Charles – 1992
This paper presents the seven assessment instruments used by the Student Literacy Corps project at Fitchburg State College, Massachusetts, to document tutee progress and tutor assessment. The paper includes: (1) the Flippo Interest Inventory (for assessing tutee's attitudes toward reading); (2) instructions for the tutor to give to students on how…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Peer Teaching, Reading Attitudes, Student Attitudes
Lazarus, Lissa J. – 1991
Using the pocket classics can be a painless way to introduce the classics to eighth-grade students. Condensed versions of the classics can take the sting out of the reading, stimulate students' interest, and help prepare them for high school. To offer students in one eighth-grade class some control over their own learning, a contract system was…
Descriptors: Class Activities, English Instruction, Grade 8, Junior High Schools
Scales, Alice M.; Biggs, Shirley A. – 1983
The reading habits of 49 elderly adults were surveyed, using the SERA inventory, to examine two hypotheses: there is no difference among elderly adults' perceptions of their reading habits as related to factors of reading skill, preference, physical functioning, attention span/concentration, and emotional well-being, and there are no significant…
Descriptors: Literature Appreciation, Motivation, Needs Assessment, Older Adults
Nash, George H. – 1989
The great majority of the Founding Fathers were readers. In fact, the leading political figures of late eighteenth-century America were generally, and often intimately, acquainted with the output of the greatest European minds of the day--and of the minds of the ancient western world. Two factors above all placed an ineffaceable stamp on the…
Descriptors: Intellectual Experience, Library Acquisition, Library Role, Reading Attitudes
Rosenblatt, Louise M. – 1988
Because any reading or writing research project or teaching method rests on some kind of epistemological assumptions and some models of reading and writing processes, a coherent theoretical approach to the interrelationships of the reading and writing processes is needed. In light of the post-Einsteinian scientific paradigm and Peircean semiotics,…
Descriptors: Language Role, Reading Attitudes, Reading Processes, Reading Writing Relationship
Nelson, Robert L. – 1981
Children are taught to read in a number of ways, are helped by reading specialists, tutors, parents, and peers, and are provided with a variety of materials designed to meet their needs and interests. Yet many children grow up with not only a dislike for reading, but a fear of it. It is not enough for teachers to develop reading skills in their…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Reading Attitudes, Reading Instruction
Cramer, Eugene H. – 1981
Thirty eleventh-grade students were the subjects of a study to determine whether a person reporting a high degree of mental imagery in reading would also score well on comprehension tests and report a positive attitude toward reading. Subjects were first given the Estes Reading Attitude Scale, the results of which indicated no significant…
Descriptors: Grade 11, High Schools, Reading Achievement, Reading Attitudes
Fink, Rosalie P. – 1997
A study examined how, when, and under what conditions severe dyslexics developed high literacy skills, as well as the role of gender differences in literacy development and professional success. Subjects were 60 highly successful dyslexic adults (30 men and 30 women) and 10 nondyslexic male and female normative controls. Results indicated that…
Descriptors: Adults, Dyslexia, Higher Education, Models
Hamston, Julie Ann – 2001
This paper outlines the first stage of a research project on the topic of boys (aged 11-17) and literacy and the mediating role that families play in building interpersonal relations around reading and guiding boys into a broad range of literacy practices in the home. Findings from this research will inform a comparative study of boys identified…
Descriptors: Family Environment, Literacy, Males, Mothers
Otter, Martha E.; And Others – 1995
A longitudinal study investigated the effects of leisure time reading (reading at home for pleasure or fun) on pupils' reading achievement in school. Subjects, 736 students in grades 3, 4, 5, and 6 in 30 schools located throughout the Netherlands, had their reading achievement determined five times: at the beginning and end of grade 3 and at the…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Foreign Countries, Longitudinal Studies, Reading Achievement
McGinley, William; Kamberelis, George – 1991
A study examined the personal, social, and political functions that underlie the reading and writing that young children do about themselves, their families and communities, and their culture. Subjects, five third-grade children attending an inner-city elementary school, participated in an alternative language arts program involving independent…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cultural Context, Grade 3, Inner City
Pages: 1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |  6  |  7  |  8  |  9  |  10  |  11  |  ...  |  18