Etiology of Reading Comprehension Style. Technical Report No. 124.

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Etiology of Reading Comprehension Style. Technical Report No. 124.
Language: English
Authors: Spiro, Rand J., Illinois Univ., Urbana. Center for the Study of Reading., Bolt, Beranek and Newman, Inc., Cambridge, MA.
Peer Reviewed: N
Page Count: 21
Publication Date: 1979
Sponsoring Agency: National Inst. of Education (DHEW), Washington, DC.
Document Type: Reports - Research
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, Reading Comprehension, Reading Diagnosis, Reading Processes, Reading Research, Remedial Instruction, Research Reports
Abstract: Recent research in reading comprehension suggests that there are substantial differences between individuals in their patterns of resource allocation to text-based (bottom-up) and knowledge-based (top-down) reading processes. Less able readers tend to overrely on processes in one direction, producing deleterious effects on comprehension. Factors underlying an overreliance on bottom-up processes include the following; schema unavailability or difficulty in activation; skill deficiency; student misconceptions about reading as being primarily a bottom-up process; differences in general cognitive styles; and idiosyncratic patterns of reading behavior eliciting a mistaken diagnosis of a given reading cycle. Educators should employ different remediation strategies for poor readers with different comprehension styles, and should determine instruction by the cause of the reading difficulty rather than the manisfestation. (DF)
Entry Date: 1979
Accession Number: ED170734
Database: ERIC
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