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Showing 196 to 210 of 350 results Save | Export
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Roser, Nancy; Martinez, Miriam – Language Arts, 1985
Reports observations of the storytime of preschool children at home and in schools. The results indicated that children's responses were similar in type whether at home or at school but that children tended to respond to literature more like the adult in the situation than like the other children. (HTH)
Descriptors: Language Arts, Literature Appreciation, Parent Child Relationship, Parent Role
Mikkelsen, Nina – Highway One, 1985
Studies how children negotiate the meaning of literature by examining how they responded when given the opportunity to retell a story directly after hearing it. (DF)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Elementary Education, Language Processing
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Bazerman, Charles – Written Communication, 1985
Reports on the reading processes of seven research physicists using data gathered from a series of interviews and observations. Reveals reading processes permeated with individual purposes and schema. (FL)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Content Area Reading, Knowledge Level, Learning Theories
Ryan, Bazy E. B.; Smith, Lyle R. – 1995
Numerous studies have focused on attitudes toward reading and how to measure such attitudes. The present study examined the effects of both the survey format and the reading abilities of 82 sixth graders at a middle school in McDuffie County, Georgia. Since all of the students had taken the Iowa Tests of Basic Skills, the language arts composite…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Grade 6, Intermediate Grades, Language Arts
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Crismore, Avon – Discourse Processes, 1990
Reports the impact of metadiscourse on sixth grade students' learning and attitudes. Finds that low-comfort students learn more when informational metadiscourse is presented in interpersonal voice and high-comfort students learn less. Finds that students' attitudes are more tolerant of opinions if they read just one type of metadiscourse. (KEH)
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Grade 6, Intermediate Grades, Reader Response
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Pritchard, Robert – Reading Research Quarterly, 1990
Examines how cultural schemata influence American and Palauan students' reported strategies and their reading comprehension. Finds that students predominantly use processing strategies categorized under awareness development and intrasentential ties establishment for culturally unfamiliar passages. Finds that students use intersentential ties and…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Cultural Context, Foreign Countries, Grade 11
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Dekker, Mary M. – New Advocate, 1991
Describes classroom-based research on the use of reading logs with second and third graders. Discusses the range and character of student responses, student behavior about books, and the stories they tell the teachers and each other. (SR)
Descriptors: Classroom Research, Grade 2, Grade 3, Primary Education
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Carico, Kathleen M. – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2001
Investigates the possibilities that a reader response approach offered strong female characters to four middle school girls reading and talking about two young adult novels. Examines issues involved in negotiating meaning in such literature discussions, including real talk, "inappropriate" talk, preferences in group talk, and privileged talk.…
Descriptors: Characterization, Discussion (Teaching Technique), English Instruction, Females
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Galda, Lee; Beach, Richard – Reading Research Quarterly, 2001
Reviews the evolution of relevant research in both response to literature and in the enactment of response-based practices in classrooms. Examines research on text, readers, and contexts. Examines research exploring how readers construct texts as cultural worlds, construct identities through participation in worlds, and share responses through…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction, Higher Education
Dollerup, Cay; And Others – 1995
This paper is the last in a series of 14 detailing the procedures involved in setting up an interdisciplinary project that explores the similarities and dissimilarities in the response to literature in readers from different countries. It marks the end of the preparatory work for the "Folktale-project." The first section is an overview of the…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences, Folk Culture, Foreign Countries
Cobb, Susan M. – 1992
A study investigated to what extent average middle school students were able to perceive the social issues embedded in literature by Dr. Seuss. Seventy-four seventh-grade students responded to five Dr. Seuss stories in free-writing exercises, response worksheets, and question worksheets. Results showed that the majority of students (approximately…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Grade 7, Junior High Schools, Middle School Students
Langer, Judith A. – 1993
To better understand the nature of students' approaches to literary understanding, a study compared the meaning-making approaches of traditionally judged above and below average readers. In all, 144 protocols were analyzed from 24 students (12 seventh graders and 12 eleventh graders, half in each class judged as above and half as below average…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis, Protocol Analysis, Reader Response
Dollerup, Cay; And Others – 1989
As part of the Folktale project, which explores similarities and dissimilarities in the response to literature from and in different cultures, advanced undergraduate students in classes on literary interpretation or literary history analyzed a Danish, a Greenlandic, and a Turkish folk tale. Two male and two female students in classes on literary…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Folk Culture, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Tucker, Nicholas – 1983
Studies suggesting appropriate literature for children at various stages of social and intellectual development can offer only a general picture of children's changing response to literature. While smaller children appear to prefer shorter stories in simple language, for example, they readily accept the unfamiliar place names or nonsense words of…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Authors, Child Development, Childhood Attitudes
Stewig, John Warren – 1989
The assumption that readers understand best and respond most positively to writing and illustrations which reflect their own first-hand experience was tested. To elicit response from children, four books by Byrd Baylor were used in three classes of fifth graders, in urban, suburban, and rural schools. After the books were read and the pictures…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Grade 5, Illustrations, Intermediate Grades
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