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Reed, Deborah K.; Petscher, Yaacov – Reading Psychology, 2012
This study examined whether the type of prompt or the method of passage reading had an effect on the retell performance of 6th-8th graders randomly assigned to one of four retell testing conditions. Both the type of prompt and the use of follow-up prompting were significantly related to the percentage of predetermined idea units retold. Effect…
Descriptors: Grade 6, Grade 7, Grade 8, Reading Research

Langford, Judith C.; Allen, Elizabeth G. – Reading Horizons, 1983
Reports that regular participation by groups of fifth- and sixth- grade students in a program of uninterrupted sustained silent reading was accompanied by improved performance on a measure of reading achievement over groups who did not participate in the program. Whether the program affected reading attitudes is not clear. (FL)
Descriptors: Grade 5, Grade 6, Intermediate Grades, Reading Achievement

Cote, Nathalie; Goldman, Susan R.; Saul, Elizabeth U. – Discourse Processes, 1998
Examines fourth- and sixth-grade children's strategies (using think-aloud protocols or silent reading) for processing informational text. Finds that silent readers engaged in more physical backtracking to previously-read sentences, while think-aloud protocol processing tended to focus on the local, sentence level. Illustrates complex relations…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Content Area Reading, Grade 4, Grade 6

Cunningham, James W.; Caplan, Robert M. – Reading World, 1982
Finds support for the concurrent validity of miscue analysis as a measure of the silent reading processes of elementary school students with respect to the dimensions of syntactic and semantic strength. (FL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Grade 5, Grade 6

Schumm, Jeanne Shay; Baldwin, R. Scott – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1989
Examines the comparative use of grapho/phonic and syntactic/semantic cues for ongoing word recognition by readers in grades two, four, six, and eight reading both silently and orally. Finds a greater number of altered words were identified in the oral compared to the silent reading mode in grades four, six, and eight. (RS)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Cues, Elementary Education, Grade 2
Coy-Shaffer, Joye; Pettit, Shirley – 1989
A study conducted in the Orange County Public Schools in central Florida investigated the reading interests of sixth-grade students. The study also gathered information from teachers regarding the nature and source of reading materials used for independent reading in their classrooms and on the implementation of sustained silent reading practices.…
Descriptors: Grade 6, Independent Reading, Intermediate Grades, Middle School Students
McDaniel, Ruth Rogers – 1983
A psycholinguistic analysis of oral reading miscue substitutions and of silent reading cloze substitutions was used to compare five dimensions of the oral and silent reading processes: grammatical function, syntactic acceptability, semantic acceptability, meaning loss, and correction. Subjects were third and sixth grade students with high,…
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Cloze Procedure, Comparative Analysis, Elementary Education
McCready, Michael Andrew – 1972
This study attempted to determine the extent to which phonemic-graphemic correspondence problems adversely affect reading comprehension among black children who are nonstandard speakers of English. An instrument requiring both silent and oral reading was devised by the investigator to test the effects of phonemic-graphemic correspondence problems…
Descriptors: Black Students, Elementary Education, Grade 5, Grade 6