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21
Emergent and Early Literacy Opportunities for Children with Visual Impairment With/Without an Additional Disability
In: ETD collection for University of Nebraska - Lincoln (2020)
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22
A Meta-analysis on the Effects of Vocabulary Instruction for English Learners
Xiong, Ellina. - 2020
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23
Handbuch Deutschunterricht und Inklusion
Hochstadt, Christiane (Herausgeber); Olsen, Ralph (Herausgeber). - Basel : Beltz, 2019
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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24
Approximations of disciplinary literacy in English Language Arts: an analysis of high school students' developing understanding of literary analysis
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25
Coping with Text Complexity in the Disciplines: Vulnerable Readers' Close Reading Practices
Buffen, Leslie. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2019
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26
Strategies ESL Saudi Arabian Graduate Students Use to Learn New Academic Vocabulary Across Domains
In: http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=toledo1554976746592993 (2019)
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27
應用平衡閱讀教學加強國小學童英語學習表現及閱讀態度 ; Implementing Balanced Reading Instruction to Enhance EFL Elementary School Students’ Learning Performances and Reading Attitudes
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28
Teachers' beliefs and strategies when teaching reading in multilingual settings. Case studies in German, Swedish and Chilean grade 4 classrooms
Bravo Granström, Monica. - : Logos Verlag, 2019. : Berlin, 2019. : pedocs-Dokumentenserver/DIPF, 2019
In: Berlin : Logos Verlag 2019, 310 S. - (Zugl.: Weingarten, Univ., Diss., 2018) (2019)
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29
Oats, Peas, Beans, and Early Literacy Skills Grow: A Program Evaluation of Education through Music
Lehman, Laura D.. - : Alfred University, 2019
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30
A Comparative Analysis of Student Achievement of First Grade Students Using Fundations vs. Heggerty and Words Their Way
Schwartz, Stephen. - : Lindenwood University, 2019
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31
The Relationship of Reading Instruction Using Comprehension Strategies for Expository Texts to the Academic Achievement of Elementary Students
Weise, Patricia W.. - : Notre Dame of Maryland University, 2019
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32
Using Vocabulary Matching Curriculum Based Measurement to Monitor the Progress of Students in Science Courses
Cathers, Abigail E.. - : Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville, 2019
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33
Coping With Text Complexity in the Disciplines: Vulnerable Readers’ Close Reading Practices
Buffen, Leslie. - : University of California, Berkeley, 2019
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34
The Explicit Integration of Technology During Lesson Planning
Spencer, John W.. - : University of Pennsylvania, 2019
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35
What Makes Reading Difficult? An Investigation of the Contribution of Passage, Task, and Reader Characteristics on Item Difficulty, Using Explanatory Item Response Models
Toyama, Yukie. - : University of California, Berkeley, 2019
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36
The Impact a Growth Mindset Professional Development Has on the Perceptions and Academic Achievement of Fourth Grade Students in Reading in a Rural District
Farrer, Michelle. - : Concordia University Irvine, 2019
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37
Emic Views of a Reading Intervention: A Qualitative Case Study of Motivation and Engagement
Erickson, Joy Dangora. - : University of New Hampshire, 2019
Abstract: Although little attention has been paid to primary-age children’s reading motivation in comparison to older readers, one disturbing trend has been repeatedly observed: reading motivation generally declines across the early elementary years. Given that children’s perceptions of school experiences shape motivation, and motivation impacts achievement, it is imperative that we better understand how school programming intended to promote reading skill development influences younger students’ motivation to read within it and beyond it. This dissertation employs a qualitative case study design, an approach rarely used to examine reading motivation, to begin addressing the first concern; a sample (N = 14) of kindergarten, first-grade, and second-grade readers’ motivation-related perceptions (i.e., benefits and costs) of a pull-out Tier 2 reading intervention are examined. Students’ understandings are considered in conjunction with reading specialist and researcher evaluations of their behavioral engagement to pluralistically infer how the program is shaping students’ developing motivation for doing reading in the intervention setting. All participants articulated benefits associated with reading intervention involvement, and ten students across the three grades articulated costs associated with their participation. Perceived intervention costs appeared to outweigh perceived benefits for five students; despite recognized benefits of participation, these five students indicated that given the choice, they would opt to do reading in the classroom rather than do reading in the intervention setting. Furthermore, children’s perceived costs tended to align with their basic psychological needs for autonomy and/or competence not being sufficiently met within the intervention; children who preferred the classroom typically desired more control over their learning and/or more support in completing tasks they understood to be challenging. Lastly, results evidenced that adult reports of children’s intervention engagement largely aligned with first- and second-grade students’ motivation for doing reading in the intervention setting; children who indicated a preference for doing reading in the classroom as opposed to the intervention setting were generally reported by adults to be less engaged in the reading intervention. Adult reports of kindergarten students’ engagement were less telling of their instructional preferences. Regardless, students’ perceptions offered valuable information about how the reading intervention could be modified to better support their developing motivation—information that might not have surfaced if adult reports of engagement had been relied upon exclusively. In summary, results: a) imply that children’s perceived benefits and costs of imposed programming should be regularly elicited and sincerely considered in addition to adult reports of engagement to gauge the impact of intervention programming on motivation and to make modifications; b) imply that additional research is warranted to better understand students’ motivation-related perceptions of intervention programming across contexts and to gauge the impact of programming on children’s more universal reading motivation; and c) evidence the promise of the methodological approach utilized in furthering our understanding of young children’s reading motivation in context.
Keyword: Reading instruction|Psychology
URL: http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=13813561
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38
Teachers' beliefs and strategies when teaching reading in multilingual settings. Case studies in German, Swedish and Chilean grade 4 classrooms ...
Bravo Granström, Monica. - : Logos Verlag, 2019
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39
Oral reading fluency: Predicting outcomes for culturally and linguistically diverse students ...
Mora, Hector Geovanni. - : University of Utah, 2019
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40
The Effects of a Systematic Tier 2 Intervention on Kindergartners' Dibels Benchmarks
In: Doctoral Dissertations and Projects (2019)
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