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Klecan-Aker, Joan S.; Kelty, Kimberly R. – Journal of Childhood Communication Disorders, 1990
Ten fourth grade language-learning-disabled children and 10 normal peers were shown a movie and subsequently asked to tell the story. Language-disabled subjects told less complex stories. It is concluded that normal subjects used a greater number of story grammar components within each narrative and remembered more aspects of the previously…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Intermediate Grades, Language Handicaps, Memory
Levin, Joel R.; And Others – 1981
Two experiments compared the effectiveness of two separate mnemonic devices for learning the states and their capitals--one a complex key word system using substitute words for each syllable, the other a simple key word device interacting key words from the state and capital names in an illustration. In the first experiment, 88 fourth and fifth…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Educational Research, Elementary Education, Intermediate Grades
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Osborn, Robert G.; Meador, Darlene M. – Behavioral Disorders, 1990
This study compared the performance of depressed and nondepressed males (ages 9-11) on tasks requiring overt rehearsal and free recall. The depressed children rehearsed less both in repetition of words and in the size of their rehearsal sets and recalled fewer words. It is concluded that depressed children have short-term memory processing…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Depression (Psychology), Emotional Disturbances, Intermediate Grades
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Graves, Ann W.; Levin, Joel R. – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1989
Thirty learning-disabled students in grades five-eight read several passages and attempted to identify and remember main ideas. Students were assigned to one to three conditions: control, monitoring and self-questioning, or mnemonic. The monitoring strategy was most effective for main-idea finding, whereas the mnemonic strategy was most effective…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Intermediate Grades, Junior High Schools, Learning Disabilities
Lehrer, Ariella; Pezdek, Kathy – 1983
A study examined the nature of the schematic processes for a story presented in television, text, and radio form and for a story presented to above average and average readers. The story was parsed according to J. M. Mandler and N. S. Johnson's story grammar. Schematic processing was inferred from the pattern of node memorability for the different…
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis, Grade 6
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hurford, David P.; Shedelbower, Ann – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1993
Two studies with 33 reading-disabled and 31 non-reading-disabled second through fourth graders indicate that young disabled readers may not be able to hold phonemic information in their memories long enough to make adequate discrimination of phonological information within syllables. (SLD)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Discrimination Learning, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students