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Barry Gilmore – English Journal, 2017
The Bechdel test, the author's student Marley explained, is named for the US graphic novelist and cartoonist Alison Bechdel. To pass the test, a work of fiction must contain at least one scene in which two or more women (preferably named characters) discuss something other than a male. Students who read from the canon of works regularly encounter…
Descriptors: High School Teachers, Language Arts, Reading Teachers, Adolescent Literature
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McNamara, Danielle S.; Kendeou, Panayiota – International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education, 2011
The authors review five major findings in reading comprehension and their implications for educational practice. First, research suggests that comprehension skills are separable from decoding processes and important at early ages, suggesting that comprehension skills should be targeted early, even before the child learns to read. Second, there is…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Reading Comprehension, Correlation, Reading Instruction
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Dymock, Susan; Nicholson, Tom – Reading Teacher, 2010
This article reviews theoretical and research evidence to support the explicit and systematic teaching of five comprehension strategies that will help all students tackle expository texts with success. The article explains the "High 5!" strategies and how to teach them. An example of a lesson is included to show how the five strategies connect…
Descriptors: Inferences, Reading Instruction, Teaching Methods, Reading Comprehension
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Hollenbeck, Amy Feiker – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2011
Comprehension instruction for students with learning disabilities (LD) is explored from three perspectives, all within the framework of engaging students in meaningful conversations about text with their general education peers. First, excerpts from lesson transcripts are provided to illustrate one special educator's emphasis on student-generated…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Learning Disabilities, Special Education Teachers, Inferences
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Ozgungor, Sevgi; Guthrie, John T. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2004
The authors examined the impact of elaborative interrogation on knowledge construction during expository text reading, specifically, the interactions among elaborative interrogation, knowledge, and interest. Three measures of learning were taken: recall, inference, and coherence. Elaborative interrogation affected all aspects of learning measured,…
Descriptors: Knowledge Level, Interaction, Inferences, Recall (Psychology)
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Campion, Nicolas – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
In 3 experiments, affirmative and hypothetical probes were presented after narrative texts containing conditional arguments. According to the data, readers represented modus ponens deductions as certain, except when it was only a weakly necessary cause of a given effect. They represented any logically invalid inferences resulting from affirming…
Descriptors: Experimental Psychology, Inferences, Logical Thinking, Syntax
Dyck, Norma; Sundbye, Nita – Learning Disabilities Research, 1988
The study compared effects of two ways of making text more explicit for learning disabled (LD) children: by adding supportive information or asking inference questions at the ends of episodes. Adding elaborative content enhanced story understanding while asking inference questions was not more effective than the explicit version of the text alone.…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Elementary Education, Inferences, Learning Disabilities