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Smith-Pethybridge, Valorie – ProQuest LLC, 2009
College personnel are required to provide accommodations for students who are deaf and hard of hearing (D/HoH), but few empirical studies have been conducted on D/HoH students as they learn under the various accommodation conditions (sign language interpreting, SLI, real-time captioning, RTC, and both). Guided by the experiences of students who…
Descriptors: Protocol Analysis, Partial Hearing, Deafness, Metacognition
Dicks, Dennis; Ives, Cindy – Canadian Journal of Learning and Technology, 2008
Instructional design (ID) in its short life has been dominated by behaviourist approaches despite critique focusing on issues of practice as well as theory. Nonetheless, little research has addressed two fundamental questions: "What constitutes good instructional design?" and "How do instructional designers create good design?"…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Best Practices, Database Management Systems, Interviews
Rozalski, Michael E. – Beyond Behavior, 2008
Generally, teachers are good students. Most know how to successfully address a variety of academic tasks demands. Many know how to compensate for any personal weaknesses they have with specific skills. Sometimes teachers are such good students that they forgot what it was like to struggle to learn something. Unfortunately, students with emotional…
Descriptors: Test Wiseness, Memory, Study Skills, Learning Strategies
Marino, Michael; Moylan, Mary Elizabeth – 1994
A study examined the commonalities that "voracious" readers share, and how their experiences can guide parents, teachers, and librarians in assisting children to become self-actualized readers. Subjects, 25 adults ranging in age from 20 to 67 years, completed a questionnaire concerning their reading histories and habits. Respondents…
Descriptors: Adults, Protocol Analysis, Reading Attitudes, Reading Habits
Pirolli, Peter – 1992
Four papers from a project concerning information-processing characterizations of the knowledge and processes involved in design are presented. The project collected and analyzed verbal protocols from instructional designers, architects, and mechanical engineers. A framework was developed for characterizing the problem spaces of design that…
Descriptors: Architecture, Cognitive Processes, Computer Simulation, Design
Barnett, Jerrold E. – 1998
This study examined the self-regulated strategies college students used as they read their textbooks in preparation for examinations, noting whether they adapted these strategies across the semester. Eight students completed three think aloud sessions across the course of a college class. Each think aloud involved participants studying their…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Higher Education, Oral Reading
Miller, Arden T.; Nicholls, John G. – 1986
Discussed are research methods used to measure developmental changes in children's reasoning about ability. While adults generally differentiate ability, effort, luck, and task difficulty as causes for success and failure, children progressively think that effort or outcome is ability (level 1), that effort is the cause of performance outcomes…
Descriptors: Ability, Abstract Reasoning, Child Development, Developmental Stages
Chi, Michelene T. H.; And Others – 1987
A study examined in detail the initial encoding of worked-out examples of mechanics problems by "good" and "poor" students, and their subsequent reliance on examples during problem solving. The subjects, three males and five females, were selected from responses to a university campus advertisement. Six of them were working…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Cognitive Style, College Students, Higher Education
Peer reviewedVoss, Ralph F. – Journal of Advanced Composition, 1983
Contends that composition studies risks a detrimental borrowing of prestige from science, a borrowing that is not only potentially misleading but also too limiting if it draws attention away from the broad spectrum of considerations inherent in composition studies. (RAE)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Higher Education, Models, Protocol Analysis
Peer reviewedDobrin, David N. – College English, 1986
Replies to Steinberg's article on protocol analysis in this issue and argues that even if the writing process is a problem-solving process, it is too complex to analyze sufficiently using protocols. (SRT)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Psychology, Models, Problem Solving
Cheng, Chin-kuei – 1999
This paper reports the results of a think-aloud study that investigated the comprehension processes of 10 Chinese English as a Second Language college students as they read texts in English. All participants were asked to read two English passages and think aloud as they read them. After reading each passage, the students answered 20…
Descriptors: College Students, English (Second Language), Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Brown, Steven – 2002
This paper addresses how rereading can improve comprehension of second language college texts, describing a pilot study that examined what happens when people reread. The study involved two female Japanese college students enrolled in a U.S. university. The women were asked to do think-aloud protocols while individually reading a section of an…
Descriptors: College Students, English (Second Language), Higher Education, Japanese
Kang, Dong-Ho – 1999
The purpose of this paper was to investigate how young (second grade) L2 readers constructed intertextual meaning and how to relate their conceptions or beliefs about reading to their intertextuality. L2 readers who moved to America might be influenced by their cultural background which might further affect their reading processes. Though current…
Descriptors: Grade 2, Primary Education, Protocol Analysis, Readability
Peer reviewedTinsley, Howard E. A. – Counseling Psychologist, 1997
Reacts to a new methodology: consensual qualitative research (CQR). Provides an outline of the historical debate on psychological research methods, explains the distinction between discovery-oriented and verification-oriented research, and labels the CQR approach as a discovery-oriented design. Questions the CQR's emphasis on consensus and…
Descriptors: Counseling Psychology, Counseling Theories, Criticism, Data Collection
Peer reviewedMackey, Margaret – Research in the Teaching of English, 1997
Describes one element of the reading act as it operates in time--how "good-enough" readers of complex fiction strike a personal balance between the need for momentum and the need for accountability to the text. Draws from protocols provided by 33 readers, from eighth grade to Ph.D. level, following two readings of a novel. (PA)
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Fiction, Higher Education, Protocol Analysis

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