2012
DOI: 10.1080/02702711.2010.518881
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Reconsidering Children's Readings: Insights Into The Reading Process

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Cited by 14 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…While children sometimes looked at images to support word recognition, they used images to a greater extent to construct meaning. This builds on previous research on first grade students that showed a similar deliberate use of images by readers, not just when they had difficulty with the text, but also to prepare for reading a page and to confirm meaning (Arya & Feathers, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While children sometimes looked at images to support word recognition, they used images to a greater extent to construct meaning. This builds on previous research on first grade students that showed a similar deliberate use of images by readers, not just when they had difficulty with the text, but also to prepare for reading a page and to confirm meaning (Arya & Feathers, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, the studies suggest that movement between the verbal and visual features are indicators of integrative processing, the interrelation of verbal and visual information. Verhallen and Bus (2011) and Arya and Feathers (2012) begin to link integrative processing to semiotic connections between the verbal and visual texts and to strategies that support meaning construction. All of these studies looked at either young children who are not yet reading or who are just beginning to read or they looked at older children reading informational material.…”
Section: Children's Use Of Images During Readingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The remaining 38 percent of tolds (12 percent of total LR errors) were likely a result of developing structural patterns in the EL's language, such as the use of question words at the beginning of a sentence ("what" [T3], "where" [T3; T6], and "why" [T9]), the use of the conditional "would" (T3) and the irregular verb tense, "shall" (T8). The large number of tolds is significant because each is a missed opportunity for the EL to problem-solve and self-correct when reading (Arya & Feathers, 2012;Brown, 2013;Clay, 2013;Fried, 2013). Tolds are not coded for semantic and graphophonic acceptability unless the child makes an attempt at the word first; then the teacher codes the child's attempt.…”
Section: Toldsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a relatively new methodology, EMMA studies have frequently focused on written texts with adult students (Paulson, 2002) and bilingual readers (Freeman, 2001). Only a few EMMA studies have included picture books (Arya & Feathers, 2012;Duckett, 2003;Feathers & Arya, 2012). In these studies, the written and pictorial texts had relationships that were illustrated (i.e., written text carries all of the meaning; pictorial text does not provide new information), symmetrical (i.e., written and pictorial texts are redundant and tell the same story) or complementary (i.e., written and pictorial texts fill in gaps to leave little to readers' imaginations).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%