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Crain-Thoreson, Catherine; Lippman, Marcia Z.; McClendon-Magnuson, Deborah – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1997
College students (n=24) read passages marked for think-aloud (TA) procedure, not marked for TA, and control (no TA). The marked procedure elicited more veridical protocols, and students who scored high on the comprehension test were more likely to have made many TA comments reflecting a knowledge-transforming approach to the text. (SLD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Higher Education, Protocol Analysis
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Eva-Wood, Amy L. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2004
What role can emotions play in informing readers' interpretations of poems? This think-aloud study, with an experimental design, featured 10 college freshmen randomly assigned to 2 groups. The think-aloud (TA) group verbalized thoughts while reading 2 poems, and the think-and-feel-aloud (TFA) group voiced both thoughts and feelings. Participants…
Descriptors: Poetry, College Freshmen, Protocol Analysis, Emotional Response
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Schommer, Marlene; Surber, John R. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1986
This paper investigated the apparent failure of subjects to assess accurately their own reading comprehension. The results showed that readers who exhibited an illusion of knowing tended to have shown distortions in their passage summaries, whereas subjects who knew that they had failed to comprehend were more likely to have omitted information…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Multiple Choice Tests, Protocol Analysis, Reading Comprehension
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Muth, K. Denise; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1988
A study involving 32 undergraduate students was conducted to identify mechanisms by which instructional objectives affect learning. Protocols for thinking out loud were examined for evidence of rehearsal activity. Results suggest that instructional objectives enhanced real-time rehearsal activity, recall, and reading time. (TJH)
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Educational Objectives, Higher Education, Learning Processes
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Hong, EunSook; O'Neil, Harold F., Jr. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1992
A mental model analysis was conducted with 27 graduate and 29 undergraduate students in the statistical hypothesis testing domain to determine the nature of relevant mental models that can be taught to novices. Results suggest the efficacy of using separate and diagrammatic strategies in teaching novices introductory hypothesis testing. (SLD)
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Higher Education, Hypothesis Testing, Instructional Effectiveness