617 research outputs found

    Get a GRIP on Comprehension

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    Durkin\u27s research (1978-79) has indicated that much more time is spent testing reading comprehension than teaching it. Consequently, all reading comprehension skills need to be taught by the teacher to the students in the classroom. Since making inferences is a necessary comprehension skill when reading across the curriculum (Gordon, 1985), it also must be taught. However, many children find it difficult to make inferences because they are required not only to derive a conclusion from the facts or premises found in their reading materials, but in many cases, they must go beyond the text to their own knowledge and experiences for information. Thus, prior knowledge which student bring to the text, as well as their sensitivity to the text information, are essential aspects of inferential comprehension

    Do You Want to Know What I Learned? Using Informational Trade Books as Models to Teach Text Structure

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    A brief narrative description of the journal article, document, or resource. Informational text is an important resource for classroom teachers that places unique comprehension demands on young students. Research on teaching expository text structure to young children shows that explicit instruction improves student comprehension. This practical article addresses how to use well-structured expository trade book titles to teach text structure. A lesson plan template and an extended example of an explicit lesson on order/sequence are provided

    Research Implications for Improving Basal Skill Instruction

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    We recommend that teachers teach basal skill lessons prior to reading the stories or text regardless of the placement of basal skill lesson instructional directives in the teacher\u27s manual. By teaching skills prior to reading, students gain necessary reading skills in preparation for reading rather than learning reading skills after reading only to be applied to worksheets. Aside from theory and research, common sense dictates that if reading skills are learned to help one successfully read a text, then reading skill instruction should preced the text reading

    Using text structures of information books to teach writing in the primary grades

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    Teaching children in the primary grades the text structures and features used by authors of information text has been shown to improve comprehension of information texts and provide the scaffolding and support these children need in order to write their own information texts. As teachers implement the English Language Arts Common Core State Standards (CCSS), they will need support and training on how to meet these increased curricular demands. In this article, we describe how children’s information books can be used as exemplars of well-structured text models to teach young students how to write selected discourse patterns required in the CCSS. As children in the primary grades learn to recognize and use well-structured example information texts as models for their own writing, they will be better prepared to deal with less well-structured, more complex text examples in their reading and writing in the years to come

    Enhancing alphabet knowledge instruction: Research implications and practical strategies for early childhood educators

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    Alphabet knowledge is consistently recognized as the strongest, most durable predictor of later literacy achievement. Recent research offers practical implications for increased effectiveness of teaching alphabet knowledge to young children. In this article, we outline Enhanced Alphabet Knowledge instruction (EAK), a method of practical instruction that early childhood teachers can use to organize, plan, and teach the essential skills of alphabet knowledge. EAK emphasizes identifying the letter name and sound, recognizing the letter in text, and producing the letter form, through flexible, distributed cycles of review based on factors that influence acquisition of alphabet knowledge

    Nichtinvasives Temperaturmonitoring mit der Magnetresonanz-Tomographie bei medizinischen Thermotherapien mit fokussiertem Ultraschall oder Laser

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    Die Temperaturdarstellung mit der Magnetresonanz-Tomographie (MRT) basiert auf Änderung der longitudinalen Relaxationszeit (T1), des Diffusionskoeffizienten (D) oder der Protonenresonanz-frequenz (PRF). Neue Hyperthermieverfahren zur Tumortherapie basieren auf hochenergetischem fokussiertem Ultraschall (HIFU) oder Laserinduzierter Thermotherapie (LITT). FĂŒr diese Verfahren ist eine genaue Kontrolle der ErwĂ€rmung mit Temperaturmessverfahren erforderlich. Das Ziel dieser Arbeit war die Entwicklung, Optimierung und Analyse der drei unterschiedlichen Methoden (T1, D, PRF) der MR-unterstĂŒtzten TemperaturĂŒberwachung. Die Messungen in idealen Phantomen wie Ultraschallgel zeigten in Übereinstimmung mit der Literatur eine prozentuale Änderung der Diffusionskoeffizienten von 2,22 /°C, der T1-Relaxationszeit von 1,98 /°C und der PRF von -0,0101 ppm/°C. Aus der inversen Darstellung der DatensĂ€tze ĂŒber den gesamten Kalibrierungsbereich wurde die Temperaturauflösung ermittelt (T1:2,1°C; D:0,93°C; PRF:1,4°C). Es konnten Effekte wie Phasenshift, hot spots, Karbonisierung oder Nekrosen ĂŒberprĂŒft werden. Die implementierten MR-Pulssequenzen hatten eine minimale Zeitauflösung von 1s (D), 2s (T1) und 9,7s (PRF). Tierexperimente (Hund ex-vivo, Kaninchen in-vivo) zeigten, dass Temperaturmonitoring fĂŒr eine lokale ErwĂ€rmungskontrolle bei HIFU oder LITT möglich ist, und dass Applikatoren im MR-Tomographen zu keiner wesentlichen BeeintrĂ€chtigung der BildqualitĂ€t fĂŒhren. Die Diffusionsmethode ist begrenzt durch ihre die verlĂ€ngerte Echozeit und die Anisotropie des Gewebes. Die Diffusionsmethode und die PRF-Methode sind nicht in Fettgewebe anwendbar. Beste TemperatursensitivitĂ€t erreicht die PRF-Methode. Auf Grundlage dieser Ergebnisse kann die T1- oder PRF-Methode fĂŒr das Temperaturmonitoring bei Thermotherapien am Menschen empfohlen werden. In einer ersten klinischen Anwendung konnte durch die T1-Methode eine Therapie mit HIFU am Brusttumor erfolgreich appliziert werden

    An exploration of ebook selection behavior in academic library collections

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    Academic libraries have offered ebooks for some time, however little is known about how readers interact with them while making relevance decisions. In this paper we seek to address that gap by analyzing ebook transaction logs for books in a university library

    Teaching Text Structure: Examining the Affordances of Children\u27s Informational Texts

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    This study investigated the affordances of informational texts to serve as model texts for teaching text structure to elementary school children. Content analysis of a random sampling of children’s informational texts from top publishers was conducted on text structure organization and on the inclusion of text features as signals of text structure. Our findings showed three limitations to the affordances present in informational texts currently available for elementary school children. Implications of these findings are discussed

    The influence of gender and social attention to gender equality on applicant acceptance into venture development programs: competing perspectives

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    Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to add to the small but growing body of research examining the influence of founder gender on new venture access to venture development programs. Design/methodology/approach – Hypotheses were tested utilizing a sample of 482 nascent technology ventures which applied for admittance into a venture development organization headquartered in the southern region of the United States from March 2004 through February 2016. Findings – Findings suggest that female-founded applicant ventures experience a higher likelihood of acceptance into venture development programs than male-founded applicant ventures. Results further suggest that social attention to gender equality reduces this effect for female-founded applicant ventures. Findings extend the understanding of the gendered nature of high-technology venturing and venture development organizations. Research limitations/implications – The findings of this study may not generalize to new ventures operating in other contexts (e.g., non-U.S., low-tech, and other venture development programs). Additionally, this study's design and data limitations do not allow for the establishment of causality or address founder motivations to apply for acceptance into venture development programs. Originality/value – This study adds to empirical findings regarding the influence of founder gender on new venture acceptance into venture development programs by developing and testing competing hypotheses. This study also extends extant research by examining the moderating effect of social attention to gender equality on the hypothesized relationships between founder gender and acceptance into venture development programs
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