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Gross, Melissa – Library Quarterly, 1998
Using a content analysis approach, this investigation systematically studies messages about HIV/AIDS contained in young adult novels and considers the effects of these messages as an information source for the reader. Young adults and young adult fiction are defined, and coding sheets and bibliographies are appended. (Author/LRW)
Descriptors: Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, Adolescent Literature, Content Analysis, Fiction
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Sipe, Lawrence R. – Journal of Children's Literature, 1997
Reviews perspectives on how children's literature is used in the classroom, and how literature contributes to a broader conception of literacy. Deals with literature as a tool for the development of various sorts of literate abilities, and literature as the enabler of literary understanding. Offers a concrete example involving first and second…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Childrens Literature, Classroom Environment, Literacy
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Menexas, Vicky – Journal of Children's Literature, 1997
Clarifies the "efferent" and "aesthetic" stance on Louise Rosenblatt's theoretical continuum by relating her model to the plot, characters, and scenes in Lois Lowry's "The Giver." Shows that Rosenblatt's view applies to the ways readers read texts and to the way characters in the texts read their text-worlds. Presents…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Literary Criticism, Metaphors
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Sumara, Dennis J. – Theory into Practice, 1998
Reading is an act of identity making. Because readers must complete the act of meaning making, the context and conditions of reading alter the shape of the storytelling event and the trajectory of meaning. This paper explains reading identity and pedagogy, providing techniques one professor used when teaching two novels (marking, tracing,…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Literature, Reader Text Relationship
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Sienot, Matthijs – Journal of Business and Technical Communication, 1997
Compares two methods of pretesting--the plus-minus method and the think-aloud method--with respect to their suitability for evaluating sites on the World Wide Web. Suggests that the plus-minus method is a more appropriate method for testing Web sites than the think-aloud method, but makes three qualifications to this conclusion. (SG)
Descriptors: Evaluation, Higher Education, Pretesting, Reader Text Relationship
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Warren, Thomas L. – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2001
Looks at a sample of instructional documents using Restricted and Elaborated Code and metadiscourse analysis to determine how easily users can read and understand the material. Suggests that the documents do not send a clear message to authors and editors and can be stylistically hard to understand and consequently, the approved standards…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Readability, Reader Text Relationship
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Wentworth, Michael – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2001
Considers how Frank O'Connor's "My Oedipus Complex" provides a good introduction to the subtleties of narrative voice and control. Concludes by considering the notion of control and its relation to the narrative point of view in O'Connor's story and how it bears directly upon the value of reading literature and the reader's role. (SG)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Fiction, Literature, Reader Text Relationship
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Goldman, Susan R.; And Others – Discourse Processes, 1995
Looks at the role of paragraphing on the identification of and memory for main ideas as compared to elaborative information in expository passages. Finds that paragraph manipulation had a greater effect on the differentiation of main ideas and elaborations when passage content was less familiar. (RS)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Paragraphs, Reader Text Relationship, Reading Comprehension
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Gaskins, Robert W. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1996
Investigates effects of issue-related emotional involvement on reading comprehension. Notes that three groups of eighth graders read silently about a basketball game that ended in a fight--two groups were highly emotionally involved with the teams while the third group was emotionally uninvolved with the teams. Finds that emotional involvement can…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Junior High Schools, Reader Text Relationship, Reading Attitudes
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Johnson-Sheehan, Richard; Baehr, Craig – Technical Communication: Journal of the Society for Technical Communication, 2001
Explores what it means to think visually and spatially in hypertexts and how users react and maneuver in real and virtual three-dimensional spaces. Offers four principles of visual thinking that can be applied when developing hypertexts. Applies these principles to actual hypertexts, demonstrating how selectivity, fixation, depth discernment, and…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Hypermedia, Models
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Faust, Mark – Research in the Teaching of English, 2000
Problematizes the word "experience" as it is currently being used by researchers and teachers who want to reform literature instruction in schools and colleges. Discusses how a fresh look at Dewey and Rosenblatt can reconstruct the courtroom and marketplace metaphors as sound alternatives to theories that perpetuate dualistic assumptions…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Higher Education, Literature Appreciation, Reader Response
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Sumara, Dennis J. – English Education, 1997
Attempts to represent the complexity of the web of literary relationships and their transformational space using fragmentary texts that circle around the novel "The English Patient": self as relationship and the dialogic engagement with a book by the patient himself; and the relationship and engagement with this book and with each other of a group…
Descriptors: Discussion Groups, Literature Appreciation, Reader Response, Reader Text Relationship
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Petit, Angela; Soto, Edna – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2002
Describes an argument workshop that can demystify the concept for students by revealing to them how much they already know about persuading an audience. Concludes that an argument workshop helps students see the authors included in their textbooks as individuals who drew from a repertoire of argumentative techniques to persuade an audience. (SG)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Class Activities, Persuasive Discourse, Reader Text Relationship
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Allen, Janet – Voices from the Middle, 2002
Discusses how students cite two difficulties that consistently get in the way of their success during content reading: boring texts and too many difficult words. Suggests the use of graphic organizers that help learners break down information they would have overlooked because it seemed too abstract or difficult. Concludes that the best resource…
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Graphic Organizers, Reader Text Relationship, Secondary Education
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Moon, Brian – English in Australia, 2001
Sketches an alternative, or perhaps an addition, to critical analysis and personal response. Notes the approach is historical and intertextual. Demonstrates this method using the popular television series "The X-Files." Shows how a description of a text can be built up through various kinds of research. Argues that historical and…
Descriptors: Commercial Television, English Instruction, Films, Literary Criticism
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