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1. Making Meaning: Individual and Group Response within a Book Club Structure (EJ996325)

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Author(s):

Barone, Diane

Source:

Journal of Early Childhood Literacy, v13 n1 p3-25 Mar 2013

Pub Date:

2013-03-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Evaluative

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
LiteracyBooksClubsStudent ReactionLiteracy EducationReading ComprehensionChildrens LiteratureElementary School StudentsElementary School TeachersReadingReading InstructionGrade 2Grade 3Early Childhood EducationEmergent LiteracyWriting InstructionChildrens Writing

Abstract:
This article positions a view of student responses with relation to current literacy expectations. Student responses to a single book, "The Egypt Game," are explored. The responses are analysed from a group and individual student perspectives. The responses demonstrate the complex understandings that young students created about this book. Connections to current classroom practices are explored. Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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2. It's in the Bag!: Going beyond the Science Classroom with Take-Home Literacy Bags (EJ996317)

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Author(s):

Martin, Susan FergusonDaughenbaugh, LyndaShaw, Edward L., Jr.Burch, Katrina

Source:

Science Activities: Classroom Projects and Curriculum Ideas, v50 n1 p21-30 2013

Pub Date:

2013-00-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Descriptive

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Literacy EducationEnglish (Second Language)Second Language LearningEnglish Language LearnersClassroomsElementary School ScienceScience CurriculumLiteracyScience EducationScience InstructionGrade 2Grade 3Elementary School StudentsInstructional MaterialsTeaching MethodsScientific Concepts

Abstract:
Although literacy plays a large role in elementary science classrooms, one thing that offers a challenge for educators is meeting the linguistic needs of English language learners (ELLs) while also meeting their content needs. An additional challenge is ensuring that academic literacy extends beyond the classroom. This article presents ways of extending classroom literacy into the home. The sugge Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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3. Metacognition and Control of Study Choice in Children (EJ996258)

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Author(s):

Metcalfe, JanetFinn, Bridgid

Source:

Metacognition and Learning, v8 n1 p19-46 Apr 2013

Pub Date:

2013-04-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
MetacognitionRecall (Psychology)Time ManagementGrade 3Grade 5Elementary School StudentsDecision MakingLearning StrategiesPerformanceCognitive DevelopmentChild DevelopmentMeasures (Individuals)

Abstract:
Middle childhood may be crucial for the development of metacognitive monitoring and study control processes. The first three experiments, using different materials, showed that Grade 3 and Grade 5 children exhibited excellent metacognitive resolution when asked to make delayed judgments of learning (JOLs, using an analogue scale) or binary judgments of knowing (JOKs, "know" or "don't know") witho Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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4. Upping the Ante of Text Complexity in the Common Core State Standards: Examining Its Potential Impact on Young Readers (EJ995868)

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Author(s):

Hiebert, Elfrieda H.Mesmer, Heidi Anne E.

Source:

Educational Researcher, v42 n1 p44-51 Jan-Feb 2013

Pub Date:

2013-00-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Descriptive

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Core CurriculumState StandardsAlignment (Education)Grade 2Grade 3Elementary EducationLanguage ArtsBeginning ReadingReader Text RelationshipDifficulty LevelReading AchievementPattern RecognitionReadability FormulasWord Frequency

Abstract:
The Common Core Standards for the English Language Arts (CCSS) provide explicit guidelines matching grade-level bands (e.g., 2-3, 4-5) with targeted text complexity levels. The CCSS staircase accelerates text expectations for students across Grades 2-12 in order to close a gap in the complexity of texts typically used in high school and those of college and career. The first step of the band at s Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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5. Estimating the Impact of the Massachusetts English Immersion Law on Limited English Proficient Students' Reading Achievement (EJ995860)

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Author(s):

Guo, QianKoretz, Daniel

Source:

Educational Policy, v27 n1 p121-149 Jan 2013

Pub Date:

2013-01-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Reading AchievementProgram EffectivenessReading SkillsBilingual EducationLimited English SpeakingState LegislationEnglish (Second Language)Second Language LearningGrade 3Elementary School StudentsEnglish Only MovementEducational Practices

Abstract:
The large number of limited English proficient (LEP) children in U.S. schools and the uncertainty about the impact of bilingual education versus English immersion on their achievement warrant rigorous investigation of the effects of "English immersion laws." We estimated the impact of "Question 2", the Massachusetts English immersion law, and explored whether programs provided to LEP students bef Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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6. There Is a World outside of Experimental Designs: Using Twins to Investigate Causation (EJ995837)

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Author(s):

Hart, Sara A.Taylor, JeanetteSchatschneider, Christopher

Source:

Assessment for Effective Intervention, v38 n2 p117-126 Mar 2013

Pub Date:

2013-03-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Academic AchievementTeacher EffectivenessReading FluencyEducational ResearchGrade 3Grade 1TwinsComparative AnalysisModelsOral ReadingReadingGrade 2Elementary School StudentsInferencesExperimentsScoresQuasiexperimental DesignMeasures (Individuals)

Abstract:
This study introduces a co-twin control method commonly used in the medical literature but not often within educational research. This method allows for a comparison of twins discordant for an "exposure," approximating alternative outcomes in the counterfactual model. Example analyses use data drawn from the Florida Twin Project on Reading to determine whether exposure to "teacher quality," measu Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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7. A Written Language Intervention for At-Risk Second Grade Students: A Randomized Controlled Trial of the Process Assessment of the Learner Lesson Plans in a Tier 2 Response-to-Intervention (RtI) Model (EJ995670)

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Author(s):

Hooper, Stephen R.Costa, Lara-Jeane C.McBee, MatthewAnderson, Kathleen L.Yerby, Donna CarlsonChildress, AmyKnuth, Sean B.

Source:

Annals of Dyslexia, v63 n1 p44-64 Apr 2013

Pub Date:

2013-04-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Writing SkillsWritten LanguageWriting InstructionSpecial Needs StudentsResponse to InterventionLongitudinal StudiesExperimental GroupsControl GroupsComparative AnalysisOutcome MeasuresSmall Group InstructionAt Risk StudentsAchievement TestsLesson PlansGrade 2Grade 1Grade 3

Abstract:
In a randomized controlled trial, 205 students were followed from grades 1 to 3 with a focus on changes in their writing trajectories following an evidence-based intervention during the spring of second grade. Students were identified as being at-risk (n = 138), and then randomized into treatment (n = 68) versus business-as-usual conditions (n = 70). A typical group also was included (n = 67). Th Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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8. Impact of Small-Group Tutoring Interventions on the Mathematical Problem Solving and Achievement of Third-Grade Students with Mathematics Difficulties (EJ995666)

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Author(s):

Jitendra, Asha K.Rodriguez, MichaelKanive, RebeccaHuang, Ju-PingChurch, ChrisCorroy, Kelly A.Zaslofsky, Anne

Source:

Learning Disability Quarterly, v36 n1 p21-35 Feb 2013

Pub Date:

2013-02-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Reading AchievementAt Risk StudentsTutoringProblem SolvingMathematics EducationPretests PosttestsWord Problems (Mathematics)InterventionSmall Group InstructionIntermode DifferencesTeaching MethodsAchievement GainsAptitude Treatment InteractionGrade 3Mathematical EnrichmentMathematics AchievementLearning Disabilities

Abstract:
This intervention study compared the efficacy of small-group tutoring on the mathematics learning of third-grade students at risk for mathematics difficulty using either a school-provided standards-based curriculum (SBC) or a schema-based instruction (SBI) curriculum. The SBI curriculum placed particular emphasis on the underlying mathematical structure of additive problems to represent and solve Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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9. About the Concept of Angle in Elementary School: Misconceptions and Teaching Sequences (EJ995568)

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Author(s):

Devichi, ClaudeMunier, Valerie

Source:

Journal of Mathematical Behavior, v32 n1 p1-19 Mar 2013

Pub Date:

2013-03-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Geometric ConceptsElementary School MathematicsMisconceptionsElementary School StudentsGrade 3Grade 4Concept FormationMathematics InstructionComparative Analysis

Abstract:
This paper reports classroom research dealing with the difficulties encountered by schoolchildren in the acquisition of angle concept. Two obstacles were pointed out in previous studies: the side-length obstacle and the salience of the prototypical right angle. The first aim of the present study is to determine the extent to which a teaching sequence based on a concrete situation in the meso-spac Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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10. Which Children Can Find a Way through a Strange Town Using a Streetmap?--Results of an Empirical Study on Children's Orientation Competence (EJ995392)

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Author(s):

Hemmer, IngridHemmer, MichaelKruschel, KatjaNeidhardt, EvaObermaier, GabrieleUphues, Rainer

Source:

International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education, v22 n1 p23-40 2013

Pub Date:

2013-00-00

Pub Type(s):

Journal Articles; Reports - Research

Peer Reviewed:

Yes

Descriptors:
Foreign CountriesChildrenGrade 3Grade 4Grade 5Map SkillsNavigationSpatial AbilityResearch DesignUrban AreasNovelty (Stimulus Dimension)Physical ActivitiesCognitive ProcessesMeasures (Individuals)Interdisciplinary Approach

Abstract:
This article relates about some results of an interdisciplinary research project analyzing influencing factors of children's spatial orientation competence in real space carried out by geography educators and psychologists. The focus is on the concept of representation as a theoretical foundation. The research design for collecting data of independent and dependent variables (map-based orientatio Note:The following two links are not-applicable for text-based browsers or screen-reading software. Show Full Abstract

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