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Daibao Guo; Huijing Wen; April Silimperi; Sadi Harp – Reading Psychology, 2024
Using a verbal protocol, this study investigated how 38 second-grade students identify, describe, and interpret five types of commonly used visual graphics in science texts (i.e., cut-away diagrams, maps, captioned photographs, flow diagrams, and hybrids). Additionally, we explored the challenges students encountered when interpreting these…
Descriptors: Suburban Schools, Elementary School Students, Grade 2, Elementary School Science
Peer reviewedDwyer, Francis M. – Reading Psychology, 1988
Argues that the use of visuals specifically designed to complement printed instruction can significantly improve student achievement of certain types of educational objectives, but that visualization itself represents only a mild rehearsal strategy which will not always optimize student achievement of the more complex levels of learning. (RS)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Prior Learning, Reading Research, Schemata (Cognition)
Peer reviewedEmery, Winston G. – Reading Psychology, 1988
Tests a theoretical model of hemispheric brain activity which attempts to explain the relation between visual ability and verbal written compositions. Concludes that the model which indicates that synthesis is a right brain activity and that visualizing activity can assist synthesis is supported for right-handed students. (RS)
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Electroencephalography, Lateral Dominance, Models
Peer reviewedLogan, John W.; And Others – Reading Psychology, 1987
Describes the results of a survey of highly successful junior high and middle school students, which asked open-ended questions about their perceptions of spelling. Indicates that visualizing is the most common strategy for learning new words, followed by dictionary use and repeating words over and over. (SKC)
Descriptors: Independent Study, Learning Strategies, Memorization, Psychological Studies
Peer reviewedCurtiss, Deborah – Reading Psychology, 1988
Describes a college teaching experience in which active visual analysis (hands-on deconstruction of visual statements to their constituent elements and principles) had an unblocking effect on concomitant writing assignments. Suggests that students can improve both verbal and visual articulateness when modes of perceiving and thinking are used…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Reading Research, Teaching Methods, Verbal Learning
Peer reviewedKolker, Brenda; Terwilliger, Paul N. – Reading Psychology, 1986
Concludes that there is a relationship between imagery level and comprehension and that imagery level of text can be determined "a priori" of pupils reading text. (FL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Content Area Reading, Grade 5, Intermediate Grades
Peer reviewedNeville, Donald; Woods, Alice R. – Reading Psychology, 1984
Concludes that neither the focal attention nor contextual theory offers a powerful explanation for words learned through visual exposure. (FL)
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Grade 1, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Primary Education
Peer reviewedRezabek, Landra L.; Ragan, Tillman J. – Reading Psychology, 1988
Explains how computers can offer learners powerful assistance in their acquisition of certain visual thinking skills. Describes the limitations and potential of using computers as tools for visual thinking with links to creative writing activities in a fourth-grade class. (MM)
Descriptors: Computer Graphics, Computer Uses in Education, Creative Writing, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedDavis, Albert J.; Hathaway, Betty K. – Reading Psychology, 1986
Findings imply that while preschool children both enjoy and profit from listening to stories read to them in unelaborated fashion, they gain much more from observing and participating in the actions portrayed in the stories. (FL)
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Learning Strategies, Listening Comprehension, Perceptual Motor Learning
Peer reviewedSuhor, Charles; Little, Deborah – Reading Psychology, 1988
Discusses links between visual literacy and print literacy in the following areas: graphic organizers; propaganda; video technologies; computer use; and children's drawing and writing. Describes a semiotic-theory model, depicting relationships among not only linguistic signs and visual signs, but other signs (musical, gestural, etc.) in…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Educational Theories, Elementary Education, Graphic Organizers
Peer reviewedWhyte, Jean; Harland, Rosemary – Reading Psychology, 1984
Concludes that there may be differential effectiveness of method of reading instruction according to sex, with females finding letter training simpler than word training and males finding the reverse. (FL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Females, Higher Education, Language Acquisition

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