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Zirkel, Perry Alan; Greene, John F. – 1974
The Cultural Attitude Scales represent a modular approach to the measurement of cultural attitudes and knowledge with respect to the Puerto Rican, Anglo-American, and Black-American cultures. They are applicable to programs which propose to enhance ethnic identity or cross-cultural understanding among any one or more of these three ethnic groups.…
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Attitudes, Blacks, Cross Cultural Studies
Carver, Ronald P. – 1969
The question of whether pupil diameter indicates information processing load during reading was investigated in three experiments involving 24 college students reading passages of varying difficulty. A TV camera and monitor, together with a video-recorder, were used to measure the diameter of the pupil under a reading condition and under three…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Auditory Tests, Cloze Procedure, Cognitive Measurement
Meissner, Judith A.; And Others – 1972
The ETS Matched Pictures test was used in the longitudinal study to measure children's comprehension of certain grammatical features, such as past and future tenses, negation and prepositions. The task materials for both I and II consist of a set of cards, with each card having a pair of black and white pictures. Both pictures in a pair contain…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Data Analysis, Disadvantaged Youth, Educational Testing
Halverson, Lynn H. – 1968
Practical information for using a variety of pictures in the geography classroom is provided. Although pictures which depict cultural and natural landscape conditions are readily available, the methods by which pictures should be used in the classroom to produce the greatest impact on learning need to be carefully considered by the teacher. This…
Descriptors: Captions, Classification, Educational Media, Elementary Secondary Education
Dattilo, John – Education and Training in Mental Retardation, 1987
The leisure preferences of a seven-year-old boy with severe mental retardation were systematically analyzed through the application of a computerized assessment procedure. A switch-activated microcomputer and a computer program designed to interpret the switch activations enabled the boy to choose among three leisure activities: auditory, visual,…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Assistive Devices (for Disabled), Auditory Stimuli, Case Studies
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Bell-Metereau, Rebecca – College English, 1983
Cites research indicating that while students react more strongly to visual presentations, they recall more details when reading. Offers explanations for the differences. (MM)
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Communication Research, Emotional Response, English Curriculum
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Robinson, Peter – Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 1997
Examines the extent to which Japanese learners of English as a Second Language acquired a rule regulating the argument structure frames of novel English verbs after exposure to grammatical examples of sentences containing the verbs. Results showed significant differences in the extent of learning, with the focus-on-form conditions outperforming…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Classroom Research, Cognitive Processes, College Students
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Gillis, Steven; De Schutter, Georges – Journal of Child Language, 1996
Investigated whether children's syllabification of Dutch disyllabic words with a single intervocalic consonant adhered to the universal principles of syllable structure and whether these syllabifications witnessed an overruling of the universal phonological constraints by language-specific ones. Results indicate that universal principles explain…
Descriptors: Child Language, Consonants, Dutch, Elementary Education
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Stolte, John F. – Journal of Social Psychology, 1996
Reviews two experiments that strongly support dual coding theory. Dual coding theory holds that communicating concretely (tactile, auditory, or visual stimuli) affects evaluative thinking stronger than communicating abstractly through words and numbers. The experiments applied this theory to the realm of age and evaluation. (MJP)
Descriptors: Age Differences, College Students, Communication (Thought Transfer), Decision Making
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McFarland, Ronald D. – T.H.E. Journal, 1995
Ten ways to design an effective Human-Computer Interface are explained. Highlights include material delivery that relates to user knowledge; appropriate screen presentations; attention value versus learning and recall; the relationship of packaging and message; the effectiveness of visuals and text; the use of color to enhance communication; the…
Descriptors: Computer Graphics, Computer System Design, Computer Uses in Education, Electronic Text
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Birnboim, Smadar – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1995
Investigates the symptoms of acquired surface dyslexia in Hebrew. Four acquired surface dyslexic adults were compared with eight normal second graders in terms of reading strategy. Homophones and homographs were a major source of difficulty for native Hebrew surface dyslexic readers; the normal second graders used a non-lexical strategy. (45…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Case Studies, Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis
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Rolandelli, David R.; And Others – Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1992
Compares visual processing of televised information by 85 Japanese and 111 U.S. kindergarten and grade 4 students. As predicted, Japanese children use a more visually oriented television processing strategy in understanding program content. U.S. children score higher on a comprehension test, perhaps because of cultural differences in testing…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Child Rearing, Comprehension, Cross Cultural Studies
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Gay, Geri; Boehner, Kirsten; Panella, Tara – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 1997
ArtView, developed at Cornell University, allows groups of learners to converse at a distance while viewing an image that has been pre-loaded by the instructor. Results of user-testing revealed that ArtView lacked the elements of personal choice and outstanding physical viewing environment provided by museums; however, most students reported…
Descriptors: Art, Art Education, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Mediated Communication
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Kirshner, David; Awtry, Thomas – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 2004
Information processing researchers have assumed that algebra symbol skills depend on mastery of the abstract rules presented in the curriculum (Matz, 1980; Sleeman, 1986). Thus, students' ubiquitous algebra errors have been taken as indicating the need to embed algebra in rich contextual settings (Kaput, 1995; National Council of Teachers of…
Descriptors: Mathematics Teachers, Information Processing, Algebra, Mathematics Skills
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Jones, Linda – Language Learning & Technology, 2004
This article describes two studies that examined the effects of pictorial and written annotations on second language (L2) vocabulary learning from a multimedia environment. In both studies, students were randomly assigned to one of four aural multimedia groups: a control group that received no annotations, and three treatment groups that provided…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Test Items, Testing, Vocabulary Development
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