The effect of talk and instructional mode on enhancing secondary English students’ interpretation of, response to, and appreciation for short fiction

Reading practices in high school English language arts should lead students to write richer, more developed responses to literature. Teacher-led, reflective, and performance-based instructional modes were combined with either talk or writing to produce six activities for enhancing response. A repeat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nickerson, Warren Thor
Other Authors: Straw, Stan (Education)
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/291
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.anitoba.ca-dspace#1993-2912013-01-11T13:30:40ZStraw, Stan (Education)Nickerson, Warren Thor2006-09-29T12:22:51Z2006-09-29T12:22:51Z2006-09-29T12:22:51Zhttp://hdl.handle.net/1993/291Reading practices in high school English language arts should lead students to write richer, more developed responses to literature. Teacher-led, reflective, and performance-based instructional modes were combined with either talk or writing to produce six activities for enhancing response. A repeated measures design varied the order of the six learning activities for three classes (n=44) in a Midwest suburban high school. Later written responses were scored for interpretation, response, and appreciation. Pearson correlations revealed the task and criteria were reliable. Analyses of variance (ANOVA) found that for interpretation and response, talking led to higher achievement. Conversely, writing was nearly superior to talk for appreciation. Practice and feedback may be more significant than instructional condition for raising the quality of response.1269725 bytesapplication/pdfen_USresponsereadingperformance-basedreflectiveinterpretationappreciationtalkconversationassessmentenhancingThe effect of talk and instructional mode on enhancing secondary English students’ interpretation of, response to, and appreciation for short fictionElectronic Thesis or DissertationCurriculum, Teaching & LearningSmith, Karen (Education) Hasinoff, Shelley (External)Master of Education (M.Ed.)February 2007
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic response
reading
performance-based
reflective
interpretation
appreciation
talk
conversation
assessment
enhancing
spellingShingle response
reading
performance-based
reflective
interpretation
appreciation
talk
conversation
assessment
enhancing
Nickerson, Warren Thor
The effect of talk and instructional mode on enhancing secondary English students’ interpretation of, response to, and appreciation for short fiction
description Reading practices in high school English language arts should lead students to write richer, more developed responses to literature. Teacher-led, reflective, and performance-based instructional modes were combined with either talk or writing to produce six activities for enhancing response. A repeated measures design varied the order of the six learning activities for three classes (n=44) in a Midwest suburban high school. Later written responses were scored for interpretation, response, and appreciation. Pearson correlations revealed the task and criteria were reliable. Analyses of variance (ANOVA) found that for interpretation and response, talking led to higher achievement. Conversely, writing was nearly superior to talk for appreciation. Practice and feedback may be more significant than instructional condition for raising the quality of response. === February 2007
author2 Straw, Stan (Education)
author_facet Straw, Stan (Education)
Nickerson, Warren Thor
author Nickerson, Warren Thor
author_sort Nickerson, Warren Thor
title The effect of talk and instructional mode on enhancing secondary English students’ interpretation of, response to, and appreciation for short fiction
title_short The effect of talk and instructional mode on enhancing secondary English students’ interpretation of, response to, and appreciation for short fiction
title_full The effect of talk and instructional mode on enhancing secondary English students’ interpretation of, response to, and appreciation for short fiction
title_fullStr The effect of talk and instructional mode on enhancing secondary English students’ interpretation of, response to, and appreciation for short fiction
title_full_unstemmed The effect of talk and instructional mode on enhancing secondary English students’ interpretation of, response to, and appreciation for short fiction
title_sort effect of talk and instructional mode on enhancing secondary english students’ interpretation of, response to, and appreciation for short fiction
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/291
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