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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
561

Die bevordering van leesmotivering op sekondere skoolvlak

Geyser, Hester C. 18 February 2014 (has links)
M.Ed. (Language Teaching) / The value and importance of reading as a skill is increasing. The demand for literacy is becoming more and more important in this technological age with the many job opportunities it has created. The value of reading lies in the positive influence it has on our daily lives and tasks, social adjustments as well as on our academic and personal development. As the child progresses from primary to secondary to tertiary level, the demands of readings skills, increase in volume and complexity. The responsibility of the secondary school teacher not only consists of the teaching of the reading skills but also of motivating people to read. In this study attention was given to the teaching of reading skills, namely speed and comprehension. It was endeavored to improve motivation for reading by stimulating individual interests; the correlation between speed and motivation, comprehension and motivation were determined as well as the correlation of reading frequency of child and family. During the basic planning of the study attention was given to the following aspects: (a) Reading is defined as a process or skills that consists of different components that can be taught. Attention was given to: 1. Speed. The eye and mind can be trained to read bigger segments with one fixation. 2. Comprehension is the essence of reading. Rapid reading without comprehension is worthless. Comprehension is divided in three dimensions I.e. literal comprehension, interpretation and critical comprehension. (b) Motivation for reading evokes human action; it is directed at a specific aim. Attention is given to intrinsic and extrinsic motivation.
562

Reading in the junior secondary school phase

Ford, Peter Harold 15 May 2014 (has links)
M.Ed. / The overall concern of this investigation lies in the need to improve secondary school reading performance. This concern is of great importance given the centrality of reading to the English First Language course and to the whole of the secondary school academic curriculum. Poor reading ability is an obstacle to later academic success and, for this reason, it is crucial that each pupil's reading ability and experience is developed as early as possible in the secondary school years. This investigation is based on the premise that the importance of the Standard 6 and 7 reading programme, in particular the significance of teaching reading comprehension has been underestimated and needs to be given greater attention within the English Language programme at Secondary School. The central focus of this investigation is to address the issues of reading attainment and monitoring. More specifically, my first concern is to clarify the nature of reading attainment and the factor-s involved in promoting it at Standard 6 and 7 levels. My concern for monitoring and reading attainment centres on the fact that, without adequate monitoring of individual readers and reading programmes , one is unable to assess to what extent readers are progr-eaamg, Hence the direction of this research will be to: outline a model of reading which will clarify classroom practice, reading attainment, growth and assessment. outline the comprehension demands which fluent readers at secondary school level can be expected to cope with. indicate general principles arising out of research which can be used for developing reading at secondary school level. investigate ways of monitoring and to investigate those factors which affect individual reading attainment and overall programme effectiveness.
563

Children's Perception of the Learning Value of Play

Cote, Courtney 12 December 2017 (has links)
<p> Play time has been thought to be an important part of the Kindergarten experience. However; over the years there has been a shift in what is seen in the Kindergarten classroom. Rarely is play seen in the classroom; rather there is more focus on seated work for efficiency of meeting all standards during the year. This thesis focused on how important play in the Kindergarten classroom and how much children learn through play that examined the child&rsquo;s perception of what they learned after a mixture of guided play and free play centers. Through observations of the children and interviews, this thesis showed learning can be seen while in play through the eyes of children. Students&rsquo; observations showed learning through both independent play as well as playing in groups of students. Every station observed through this study showed some type of learning whether it was a general understanding of concepts or a very specific understanding of the concepts the students were introduced to during play. This study also showed that students learned in both guided and free play settings.</p><p>
564

Notes from the margin: Understanding collective reading experience in St John's, Newfoundland

Rottmann, Jennifer Jane January 2009 (has links)
Book clubs are a popular social phenomenon, yet they have been significantly understudied in academic research. By understanding the functions and uses of collective meaning-making through articulations of The Granny Bates Book Club members in St. John's, Newfoundland, this study seeks to illuminate how readers in diasporic communities discursively engage, specifically with children's literature, to negotiate subjective positionings in complex and contradictory ways. The provocative space of book club readership, marked by the comings and goings of diasporic islander identity, legitimizes the members' enjoyment and pleasure gained from reading children's fiction. It acts as a learning space in which members deliberately exchange historical knowledges, display aesthetic evaluations of text, negotiate social, economical, geographical, and regional struggles, as well resist/adhere to gender roles and expectations, all of which adds to banked cultural capital in their daily lives. These 'notes from the margin' speak to the enduring possibilities of everyday cultural practices, specifically as practiced within an interpretative community of female readers perched on the eastern edge of Canada.
565

The Development of Core Academic Language and Reading Comprehension in Pre-Adolescent and Adolescent Learners

Phillips Galloway, Emily 31 May 2016 (has links)
Many adolescents struggle to comprehend text, a fact which has led educational researchers to speculate that these reading struggles might be linked with students’ levels of familiarity with the vocabulary and language found in these texts. However, few studies have identified the school-relevant language skills beyond vocabulary that contribute to variation in reading comprehension growth during the middle school years. With the goal of focusing additional attention on the central role of academic language in text comprehension, I explore the relationship between these language skills, referred to as Core Academic Language Skills (CALS), and reading comprehension. Study 1 of this thesis examines the concurrent development of academic language skills and reading comprehension for English Learners and their English proficient peers attending urban middle schools and followed over two academic years, from grade 6 to 7 (n=833). Parallel process latent growth modeling results suggest that academic language and reading comprehension skills develop concurrently, with rapid growth in CALS being associated with rapid growth in reading comprehension skills. Furthermore, initial levels of CALS predict rates of growth in reading comprehension. Focused on learners mostly reading below grade-level, this study highlights the potential for CALS-focused instruction to serve as a point of leverage for improving pre-adolescent and early adolescent learners’ reading comprehension outcomes. Study 2 builds on this first study by examining the co-development of academic language and reading comprehension in a broader age range for whom academic language instruction may be most critical—English proficient middle grade learners attending schools serving predominately low-income students. For decades, research has highlighted the impact of socioeconomic status on reading achievement suggesting the need to further investigate potentially malleable skills, such as academic language skills, that might be taught as part of comprehensive literacy initiatives designed to support pre-adolescent and adolescent struggling readers. Results revealed that students’ initial level of academic language proficiency was associated with their rate of reading comprehension growth across the two years they were followed and that socioeconomic status impacted reading comprehension growth indirectly via its influence on students’ initial levels of academic language skill. Results are not surprising given that academic language skill is a core component of reading comprehension. The main contribution of these findings is in revealing the significant impact of a specified core set of academic language skills on reading comprehension development. Findings suggest that these potentially malleable school-relevant language skills, shown to be unequally distributed within classrooms, constitute a promising skillset that can inform interventions designed to achieve both excellence and equity in literacy instruction during early adolescence.
566

The effects of training and the keyword method on the recall of an unfamiliar vocabulary.

Wieland, Linda DeRoy. January 1990 (has links)
Two experiments were conducted to investigate applications of the mnemonic keyword method to the recall of unfamiliar words when cued with their meanings. Both experiments used a study-test procedure and involved university students who were asked to study a list of 6-letter pseudowords, each with an English "translation". Keyword groups were presented with a concrete noun keyword for each pseudoword/translation pair, the first three letters of which were identical to the first half of the pseudoword. Subjects were asked to respond in writing with the pseudoword when cued with its translation, and keyword subjects in Experiment 1 were asked to also recall the keyword. Subjects were asked to describe, in a post-experimental interview, the method used to study each item set. Dependent measures were proportions of correctly-recalled pseudowords, letters in correct serial position, halves of pseudowords, and (only for keyword subjects in Experiment 1) keywords. Experiment 1 examined the effects of instructions to use a modification to the mnemonic keyword method, in which the orthographic form of the pseudoword was to be added to the interactive image containing the keyword and translation, were compared to free-strategy and to standard mnemonic keyword instructions across 4 study-test trials. The modified instructions neither helped nor hindered backward recall, as all groups recalled equivalent proportions of pseudowords and letters. Both keyword groups recalled more keyword-mapped portions of the pseudowords than did controls, and both groups recalled a large proportion of keywords by the second trial. Experiment 2 investigated the effects of training (including instruction, practice, and feedback) on backward recall for both subjects either provided or not provided with a keyword to map the first half of the pseudoword, across 3 study-test trials. Trained subjects were instructed to either generate mediators for the entire pseudoword (trained control group) or were instructed to use the provided keyword and generate a second to map the second half of the pseudoword (trained keyword group) and to associate the mediators with each other and with the translation, either imaginally or verbally. Individual differences in aptitude for acoustically decoding unfamiliar words into familiar words were measured with Part III of the Modern Languages Aptitude Test. An effect of training was found for recall of pseudowords, and a Trials x Training interaction for letters and for halves was observed due to differences between trained and untrained groups by the second and third trials respectively. Providing a keyword facilitated recall of first, but not second halves for trained subjects. Interestingly, more first halves were recalled by untrained than by trained keyword subjects. The opposite was true for second halves, indicating that the cognitive effort expended by trained subjects to generate further mediators may have detracted from their ability to exploit the provided mediator. MLAT scores were positively correlated to recall scores, but the correlations reached significance only for the untrained keyword group. Tests of heterogeneity of slopes revealed a significant difference in the relationship of MLAT and recall of first halves only between the trained and untrained keyword groups. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
567

Literacy practices: Social and linguistic issues related to reading in a second orthography.

Ghahremani-Ghajar, Sue-san. January 1994 (has links)
As the English language continues to hold a prominent international position both politically and academically, the need for second/foreign language (L2) learners especially those involved in the scientific and technological disciplines to read from their books in English remains a vital social and educational issue. Even though language learners seem to understand this urgency, they often show resistance towards the L2 literacy package and reading in the language which not only introduces new linguistic knowledge, but more importantly suggests change in a learner's identity. The latter seems to occur more often in situations where the learners' literacy practices do not match those in the second language. This mismatch seems to be more salient between languages in which the construction of orthographic systems are different from the Roman script. Researchers have suggested that in cultures where literacy is negotiated through scripts differing from English; as in Japanese, Chinese, and Arabic/Farsi, the levels of processing language is different in comparison to languages which use the Roman script in their literacy practices. Furthermore, research has indicated a relationship between first language reading and what takes place in the second/foreign language. For example, investigations of several variables such as background knowledge, text format, and rhetorical structure of the first language, seem to show that they either transfer to or influence second/foreign language reading. However, what has received little attention in ESL/EFL research is the influence of the first language writing system when it differs from the Roman script. The present research that was conducted in Iran, is an inquiry into reading processes of sixty-three Iranian undergraduate students. An attempt was made to explore multiple variables related to L2 reading by applying both quantitative and qualitative methodologies. For the quantitative data, multivariate statistical procedures were conducted to see which variables, namely L1 reading proficiency (first language cloze task), L2 language proficiency (second language cloze task), L1 and L2 visual search strategy (L1 and L2 visual search task) contributed most to comprehension of English text related to both a general topic and a chemistry topic. In the qualitative analysis, introspective techniques were adopted to investigate hidden issues (through think-aloud-protocols) related to social and community literacy practices not tapped in the product-oriented quantitative investigation. Results of this study reveal the influence of both sociopolitical and linguistic factors in reading English as a second/foreign language.
568

Case studies of emergent literacy in a special population.

Berry, Dean B. January 1999 (has links)
The purpose of this research study is to examine the emergent literacy of seven special needs youngsters who are included in a regular classroom. The special needs of these children, according to school authorities, ranges from autism, Down's syndrome and fragile x syndrome to severe language and intellectual impairment. There are few studies which address the emergent literacy of these special needs children. If special educators and regular teachers are to provide appropriate literacy instruction for these children, it is essential to investigate the ways these youngsters experience, participate in, use, and understand literacy. This dissertation responds to that need through a field-based qualitative study. The research design is that of an in-depth case study, with the researcher acting as the prime instrument of data collection and analysis. The case study has an ethnographic orientation and is interpretive in nature. The qualitative approach to data collection and analysis ensured thick, comprehensive descriptions and explanations using a systematic series of phases to investigate the seven youngsters' experiences with literacy in multiple contexts (school and home). Gathered over 44 weeks, the types of data collected, include audio recordings of focused interviews with the parents, teachers, teaching assistants, principals, and any others relevant to the child's instruction, as well as videotaped classroom observations, observational notes, focused literacy tasks developed from An Observation Survey (Marie Clay, 1993) and Literacy Tasks (J. Harste, V. Woodward & C. Burke, 1984), notes from school records and documents, artifacts of the children's written products from home and school. The data was analysed across the seven youngsters and described from the perspective of four themes: Beliefs/Values: about literacy, about inclusion; Experiences with and Participation in literacy; Characteristic uses of literacy at home and at school; Uses of literacy and language. The findings from this special needs population indicated that the home literacy settings of all these youngsters were highly convergent while the classroom settings were divergent. The parents' and educators' beliefs/values about inclusion and literacy played an important role in each child's literacy achievements. Despite the differences in their special needs, as evident in their written products, the children were similar in their use of literacy and their understanding of literacy concepts. The results of the study of this special needs population bear a remarkable similarity to the emergent literacy findings of researchers who have examined non special needs populations. Verbal proficiency among this special needs population did not appear to be a necessary prerequisite for them to demonstrate differing uses of literacy.
569

The relative effectiveness of a multilevel reading program at the intermediate grade level

Adamczyk, Mary Madeleine January 1959 (has links)
Abstract not available.
570

Parental participation in a primary reading program

Van Hoff, Howard Smith January 1954 (has links)
Abstract not available.

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