Tape-assisted reciprocal teaching: Cognitive bootstrapping for poor decoders
Background: Students who have limited skills in decoding and comprehension and who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be compounded when these students lack access to age‐appropriate and interesting text and have lost the notion of reading as a process o...
Saved in:
Published in | British journal of educational psychology Vol. 73; no. 1; pp. 37 - 58 |
---|---|
Main Authors | , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Oxford, UK
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
01.03.2003
British Psychological Society |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 0007-0998 2044-8279 |
DOI | 10.1348/000709903762869905 |
Cover
Abstract | Background: Students who have limited skills in decoding and comprehension and who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be compounded when these students lack access to age‐appropriate and interesting text and have lost the notion of reading as a process of obtaining meaning from print.
Aims: This research examined the effects of a modified reciprocal teaching intervention for readers with poor decoding skills and poor comprehension. Tapeassisted reciprocal teaching was used to help students with poor decoding skills develop cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improve their comprehension of high interest expository texts.
Methods: Two single‐subject research design studies involving four groups of students were conducted. Study I involved one experimental group and Study II was a multiple baseline design involving three experimental groups.
Sample: Each experimental group comprised a heterogeneous mix of six students, three with poor decoding skills and three with adequate decoding skills, all of whom showed poor comprehension.
Results: As a result of the tape‐assisted reciprocal teaching, the poor decoders demonstrated improved application of cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improved comprehension. These improvements were shown on both researcherdeveloped and standardised tests as well as on maintenance and transfer measures. The students with adequate decoding skills also showed improvements in comprehension.
Conclusions: The success of the intervention for poor decoders suggests that tape assisted reciprocal teaching may be seen as a form of ‘cognitive bootstrapping’ to enable poor readers to escape the cycle of reading failure and engage more meaningfully in the process of reading. |
---|---|
AbstractList | Examined the effects of a modified reciprocal teaching intervention for readers with poor decoding skills and poor comprehension. Tape-assisted reciprocal teaching was used to help students with poor decoding skills develop cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improve their comprehension of high interest expository texts. The success of the intervention for poor decoders suggests that tape-assisted reciprocal teaching may be seen as a form of 'cognitive bootstrapping' to enable poor readers to escape the cycle of reading failure and engage more meaningfully in the process of reading. (Original abstract - amended) Students who have limited skills in decoding and comprehension and who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be compounded when these students lack access to age-appropriate and interesting text and have lost the notion of reading as a process of obtaining meaning from print. This research examined the effects of a modified reciprocal teaching intervention for readers with poor decoding skills and poor comprehension. Tape-assisted reciprocal teaching was used to help students with poor decoding skills develop cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improve their comprehension of high interest expository texts. Two single-subject research design studies involving four groups of students were conducted. Study I involved one experimental group and Study II was a multiple baseline design involving three experimental groups. Each experimental group comprised a heterogeneous mix of six students, three with poor decoding skills and three with adequate decoding skills, all of whom showed poor comprehension. As a result of the tape-assisted reciprocal teaching, the poor decoders demonstrated improved application of cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improved comprehension. These improvements were shown on both researcher-developed and standardised tests as well as on maintenance and transfer measures. The students with adequate decoding skills also showed improvements in comprehension. The success of the intervention for poor decoders suggests that tape assisted reciprocal teaching may be seen as a form of 'cognitive bootstrapping' to enable poor readers to escape the cycle of reading failure and engage more meaningfully in the process of reading. Background: Students who have limited skills in decoding and comprehension and who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be compounded when these students lack access to age‐appropriate and interesting text and have lost the notion of reading as a process of obtaining meaning from print. Aims: This research examined the effects of a modified reciprocal teaching intervention for readers with poor decoding skills and poor comprehension. Tapeassisted reciprocal teaching was used to help students with poor decoding skills develop cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improve their comprehension of high interest expository texts. Methods: Two single‐subject research design studies involving four groups of students were conducted. Study I involved one experimental group and Study II was a multiple baseline design involving three experimental groups. Sample: Each experimental group comprised a heterogeneous mix of six students, three with poor decoding skills and three with adequate decoding skills, all of whom showed poor comprehension. Results: As a result of the tape‐assisted reciprocal teaching, the poor decoders demonstrated improved application of cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improved comprehension. These improvements were shown on both researcherdeveloped and standardised tests as well as on maintenance and transfer measures. The students with adequate decoding skills also showed improvements in comprehension. Conclusions: The success of the intervention for poor decoders suggests that tape assisted reciprocal teaching may be seen as a form of ‘cognitive bootstrapping’ to enable poor readers to escape the cycle of reading failure and engage more meaningfully in the process of reading. Students who have limited skills in decoding & comprehension & who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be compounded when these students lack access to age-appropriate & interesting texts, & have lost the notion of reading as a process of obtaining meaning from print. This research examined the effects of a modified reciprocal teaching intervention for readers with poor decoding skills & poor comprehension. Tape-assisted reciprocal teaching was used to help students with poor decoding skills develop cognitive & metacognitive strategies & improve their comprehension of high interest expository texts. Two single-subject research design studies involving four groups of students were conducted. Study I involved one experimental group & study II was a multiple baseline design involving three experimental groups. Each experimental group comprised a heterogeneous mix of 6 students, 3 with poor decoding skills & 3 with adequate decoding skills, all of whom showed poor comprehension. As a result of the tape assisted reciprocal teaching, the poor decoders demonstrated improved application of cognitive & metacognitive strategies & improved comprehension. These improvements were shown on both researcher-developed & standardized tests, as well as on maintenance & transfer measures. The students with adequate decoding skills also showed improvements in comprehension. The success of the intervention for poor decoders suggests that tape assisted reciprocal teaching may be seen as a form of "cognitive bootstrapping" to enable poor readers to escape the cycle of reading failure & engage more meaningfully in the process of reading. 6 Tables, 3 Figures, 48 References. Adapted from the source document Students who have limited skills in decoding and comprehension and who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be compounded when these students lack access to age-appropriate and interesting text and have lost the notion of reading as a process of obtaining meaning from print.BACKGROUNDStudents who have limited skills in decoding and comprehension and who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be compounded when these students lack access to age-appropriate and interesting text and have lost the notion of reading as a process of obtaining meaning from print.This research examined the effects of a modified reciprocal teaching intervention for readers with poor decoding skills and poor comprehension. Tape-assisted reciprocal teaching was used to help students with poor decoding skills develop cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improve their comprehension of high interest expository texts.AIMSThis research examined the effects of a modified reciprocal teaching intervention for readers with poor decoding skills and poor comprehension. Tape-assisted reciprocal teaching was used to help students with poor decoding skills develop cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improve their comprehension of high interest expository texts.Two single-subject research design studies involving four groups of students were conducted. Study I involved one experimental group and Study II was a multiple baseline design involving three experimental groups.METHODSTwo single-subject research design studies involving four groups of students were conducted. Study I involved one experimental group and Study II was a multiple baseline design involving three experimental groups.Each experimental group comprised a heterogeneous mix of six students, three with poor decoding skills and three with adequate decoding skills, all of whom showed poor comprehension.SAMPLEEach experimental group comprised a heterogeneous mix of six students, three with poor decoding skills and three with adequate decoding skills, all of whom showed poor comprehension.As a result of the tape-assisted reciprocal teaching, the poor decoders demonstrated improved application of cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improved comprehension. These improvements were shown on both researcher-developed and standardised tests as well as on maintenance and transfer measures. The students with adequate decoding skills also showed improvements in comprehension.RESULTSAs a result of the tape-assisted reciprocal teaching, the poor decoders demonstrated improved application of cognitive and metacognitive strategies and improved comprehension. These improvements were shown on both researcher-developed and standardised tests as well as on maintenance and transfer measures. The students with adequate decoding skills also showed improvements in comprehension.The success of the intervention for poor decoders suggests that tape assisted reciprocal teaching may be seen as a form of 'cognitive bootstrapping' to enable poor readers to escape the cycle of reading failure and engage more meaningfully in the process of reading.CONCLUSIONSThe success of the intervention for poor decoders suggests that tape assisted reciprocal teaching may be seen as a form of 'cognitive bootstrapping' to enable poor readers to escape the cycle of reading failure and engage more meaningfully in the process of reading. |
Author | Moore, Dennis W. Le Fevre, Deidre M. Wilkinson, Ian A. G. |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Deidre M. surname: Le Fevre fullname: Le Fevre, Deidre M. email: lefevre@vancouver.wsu.edu organization: Washington State University Vancouver, USA – sequence: 2 givenname: Dennis W. surname: Moore fullname: Moore, Dennis W. organization: University of Auckland, New Zealand – sequence: 3 givenname: Ian A. G. surname: Wilkinson fullname: Wilkinson, Ian A. G. organization: Ohio State University, USA |
BackLink | http://pascal-francis.inist.fr/vibad/index.php?action=getRecordDetail&idt=14751409$$DView record in Pascal Francis https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12639276$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
BookMark | eNqNkltrFDEYhoNU7Lb6B7yQQdC70ZwP3ulaq7Ie0MqCNyGT-aamnZ2Myazaf2-WXS1UsL3JgTxPEr73O0B7QxwAofsEPyGM66cYY4WNwUxJqmVZiFtoRjHntabK7KHZBqgLoffRQc5nZSsU43fQPqGSGarkDC1O3Ai1yznkCdoqgQ9jit711QTOfwvD6bNqHk-HMIUfUDUxTnlKbhzLQdXFVI2xDC342ELKd9HtzvUZ7u3mQ_Tl1dHJ_HW9-HD8Zv58UXvBBKkpbjtFidFUtFpKBqIhkmvcUKaUotSAB-Fbzo1UREolCNCGA7ROKE6lYIfo8fbe8tXva8iTXYXsoe_dAHGdrRZCY8PpDUDGBWP4WlAxgomh-lpQKMK1NrKAD6-AZ3GdhlIWS4k0QpXECvRgB62bFbR2TGHl0oX9k08BHu0Al0soXXKDD_mS46U4HG8uolvOp5hzgu4SwXbTLPbfZimSviL5MLkpxKFEHPr_q2qr_gw9XNzgMfvi7dFHIkgx6625abhff02Xzq1UTAm7fH9sv35--cks3y1L3X8DT3jdbg |
CODEN | BJESAE |
CitedBy_id | crossref_primary_10_1016_j_compedu_2010_05_016 crossref_primary_10_1024_2235_0977_a000039 crossref_primary_10_1080_10790195_2025_2453985 crossref_primary_10_1515_applirev_2017_0036 crossref_primary_10_30783_nevsosbilen_1412994 crossref_primary_10_1177_0735633115571924 crossref_primary_10_1007_s10803_017_3229_7 crossref_primary_10_1002_rev3_3005 crossref_primary_10_35675_befdergi_1484235 crossref_primary_10_1007_s10864_012_9154_0 crossref_primary_10_24090_insania_v28i2_7954 crossref_primary_10_1016_j_learninstruc_2008_05_003 crossref_primary_10_1080_01587919_2019_1600365 crossref_primary_10_1080_19404150509546789 crossref_primary_10_5604_01_3001_0054_1204 crossref_primary_10_1080_19404150709546829 crossref_primary_10_1080_02702711_2023_2253219 crossref_primary_10_1080_19404158_2016_1190770 crossref_primary_10_1007_s10648_021_09653_2 crossref_primary_10_1080_10494820_2017_1412989 crossref_primary_10_1007_s11618_015_0648_0 |
ContentType | Journal Article |
Copyright | 2003 The British Psychological Society 2003 INIST-CNRS Copyright British Psychological Society Mar 2003 |
Copyright_xml | – notice: 2003 The British Psychological Society – notice: 2003 INIST-CNRS – notice: Copyright British Psychological Society Mar 2003 |
DBID | BSCLL AAYXX CITATION IQODW CGR CUY CVF ECM EIF NPM 0-V 3V. 7QJ 7X7 7XB 88B 88E 88G 8A4 8AO 8FI 8FJ 8FK ABUWG AFKRA AHOVV ALSLI AZQEC BENPR CCPQU CJNVE DWQXO FYUFA GHDGH GNUQQ HEHIP K9. M0P M0S M1P M2M M2S PHGZM PHGZT PJZUB PKEHL POGQB PPXIY PQEDU PQEST PQQKQ PQUKI PRINS PRQQA PSYQQ Q9U S0X 7X8 8BM 7T9 |
DOI | 10.1348/000709903762869905 |
DatabaseName | Istex CrossRef Pascal-Francis Medline MEDLINE MEDLINE (Ovid) MEDLINE MEDLINE PubMed ProQuest Social Sciences Premium Collection ProQuest Central (Corporate) Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA) Health & Medical Collection ProQuest Central (purchase pre-March 2016) Education Database (Alumni) Medical Database (Alumni Edition) Psychology Database (Alumni) Education Periodicals ProQuest Pharma Collection ProQuest Hospital Collection Hospital Premium Collection (Alumni Edition) ProQuest Central (Alumni) (purchase pre-March 2016) ProQuest Central (Alumni) ProQuest Central UK/Ireland Education Research Index Social Science Premium Collection ProQuest Central Essentials - QC ProQuest Central ProQuest One Community College Education Collection ProQuest Central Health Research Premium Collection Health Research Premium Collection (Alumni) ProQuest Central Student Sociology Collection ProQuest Health & Medical Complete (Alumni) Education Database Health & Medical Collection (Alumni) Medical Database Psychology Database Sociology Database ProQuest Central Premium ProQuest One Academic (New) ProQuest Health & Medical Research Collection ProQuest One Academic Middle East (New) ProQuest Sociology & Social Sciences Collection ProQuest One Health & Nursing ProQuest One Education ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition (DO NOT USE) ProQuest One Academic ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition ProQuest Central China ProQuest One Social Sciences ProQuest One Psychology ProQuest Central Basic SIRS Editorial MEDLINE - Academic ComDisDome Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA) |
DatabaseTitle | CrossRef MEDLINE Medline Complete MEDLINE with Full Text PubMed MEDLINE (Ovid) ProQuest One Education ProQuest One Psychology ProQuest Sociology & Social Sciences Collection ProQuest Central Student ProQuest One Academic Middle East (New) ProQuest Central Essentials SIRS Editorial ProQuest Health & Medical Complete (Alumni) ProQuest Central (Alumni Edition) ProQuest One Community College ProQuest One Health & Nursing Sociology & Social Sciences Collection ProQuest Pharma Collection Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts (ASSIA) ProQuest Central China ProQuest Central ProQuest Health & Medical Research Collection Health Research Premium Collection Health and Medicine Complete (Alumni Edition) ProQuest Central Korea Health & Medical Research Collection ProQuest Sociology Collection ProQuest Central (New) ProQuest Sociology ProQuest Medical Library (Alumni) Social Science Premium Collection Education Collection ProQuest One Social Sciences ProQuest Central Basic ProQuest Education Journals ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition ProQuest Hospital Collection Sociology Collection Health Research Premium Collection (Alumni) ProQuest Psychology Journals (Alumni) ProQuest Professional Education ProQuest Hospital Collection (Alumni) ProQuest Health & Medical Complete ProQuest Medical Library ProQuest Psychology Journals ProQuest Social Sciences Premium Collection ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition ProQuest One Academic ProQuest One Academic (New) ProQuest Education Journals (Alumni Edition) ProQuest Central (Alumni) MEDLINE - Academic ComDisDome Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA) |
DatabaseTitleList | Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts (ASSIA) MEDLINE ComDisDome MEDLINE - Academic CrossRef Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA) |
Database_xml | – sequence: 1 dbid: NPM name: PubMed url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed sourceTypes: Index Database – sequence: 2 dbid: EIF name: MEDLINE url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=https://www.webofscience.com/wos/medline/basic-search sourceTypes: Index Database – sequence: 3 dbid: BENPR name: ProQuest Central url: https://www.proquest.com/central sourceTypes: Aggregation Database |
DeliveryMethod | fulltext_linktorsrc |
Discipline | Education Psychology |
EISSN | 2044-8279 |
EndPage | 58 |
ExternalDocumentID | 324982591 12639276 14751409 10_1348_000709903762869905 BJEP151 ark_67375_WNG_ZSDR9WMW_7 |
Genre | article Journal Article |
GroupedDBID | --- --Z -W8 -~X .3N .GA .GO .Y3 0-V 05W 07C 0R~ 10A 1OB 1OC 23N 31~ 33P 36B 3EH 3V. 4.4 50Y 50Z 52M 52O 52S 52T 52U 52V 52W 53G 5GY 5VS 6J9 702 7PT 7X7 8-0 8-1 8-3 8-4 8-5 85S 88E 8A4 8AO 8FI 8FJ 8R4 8R5 930 9M8 A01 A04 AABNI AAESR AAHHS AAHSB AAKAS AAONW AAOUF AASGY AAUTI AAXRX AAYJJ AAZKR ABCUV ABDBF ABIVO ABJNI ABPVW ABQWH ABSOO ABUWG ABXGK ACAHQ ACBKW ACBWZ ACCFJ ACCZN ACFBH ACGFO ACGFS ACGOF ACHQT ACMXC ACNCT ACPOU ACPVT ACXQS ADBBV ADBTR ADEMA ADEOM ADIZJ ADKYN ADMGS ADMHG ADXAS ADZCM ADZMN ADZOD AEEZP AEGXH AEIGN AEIMD AEQDE AEUQT AEUYR AFBPY AFFDN AFFNX AFFPM AFGKR AFKFF AFKRA AFPWT AFZJQ AGNAY AHBTC AI. AIACR AIAGR AIFKG AIKWM AIURR AIWBW AJBDE ALAGY ALIPV ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS ALSLI ALUQN AMBMR AMYDB ARALO ASOEW ASPBG ASTYK AVWKF AZBYB AZFZN AZQEC AZVAB BAFTC BDRZF BENPR BFHJK BMXJE BNVMJ BPHCQ BQESF BROTX BRXPI BSCLL BVXVI C45 CAG CCPQU CJNVE COF CS3 D-6 D-7 D-C D-D DCZOG DPXWK DRFUL DRMAN DRSSH DU5 DWQXO EAD EAP EAS EBC EBD EBS EDJ EIHBH EJD EMB EMK EMOBN EPS ESX F00 F5P FEDTE FUBAC FYUFA G-S G.N G50 GNK GNM GNUQQ GODZA HAOEW HEHIP HF~ HGLYW HMCUK HVGLF HZ~ H~9 KBYEO LATKE LEEKS LH4 LITHE LOXES LP6 LP7 LPU LUTES LW6 LYRES M0P M1P M2M M2S MEWTI MK4 MRFUL MRMAN MRSSH MSFUL MSMAN MSSSH MVM MXFUL MXMAN MXSSH MY~ N04 N06 NF~ NIF O66 O9- OHT OMB OMI OVD P2P P2W P2Y P2Z P4B P4C PALCI PQEDU PQQKQ PROAC PSQYO PSYQQ Q.N Q2X QB0 R.K RIG RIWAO RJQFR ROL RX1 S0X SAMSI SUPJJ SV3 TEORI TN5 TWZ UB1 UKHRP UPT VH1 W8V W99 WBKPD WH7 WHDPE WIH WII WIJ WOHZO WSUWO WXSBR XG1 XKC XOL YF5 YYQ ZCA ZCG ZZTAW ~IA ~WP AAHQN AAIPD AAMMB AAMNL AANHP AAYCA ACRPL ACUHS ACYXJ ADNMO AEFGJ AETEA AEYWJ AFWVQ AGHNM AGQPQ AGXDD AIDQK AIDYY ALVPJ PHGZM PHGZT PJZUB POGQB PPXIY PRQQA AAYXX CITATION IQODW CGR CUY CVF ECM EIF NPM VXZ YIN Z5M 7QJ 7XB 8FK AHOVV K9. PKEHL PQEST PQUKI PRINS PUEGO Q9U 7X8 8BM 7T9 |
ID | FETCH-LOGICAL-c5351-20df7219825d8663e5b16480b23777229ece5cd44967166751e2b4eeda5742653 |
IEDL.DBID | 7X7 |
ISSN | 0007-0998 |
IngestDate | Fri Sep 05 11:36:54 EDT 2025 Fri Sep 05 08:54:30 EDT 2025 Thu Sep 04 17:07:27 EDT 2025 Fri Sep 05 11:23:26 EDT 2025 Sat Aug 23 12:52:46 EDT 2025 Wed Feb 19 01:37:42 EST 2025 Wed Mar 05 09:27:42 EST 2025 Tue Jul 01 03:05:48 EDT 2025 Thu Apr 24 23:00:46 EDT 2025 Wed Aug 20 07:27:42 EDT 2025 Wed Oct 30 09:50:49 EDT 2024 |
IsPeerReviewed | true |
IsScholarly | true |
Issue | 1 |
Keywords | Human Verbal comprehension Reading School age Language Motivation Metacognition Cognition Text Educational schedule Child |
Language | English |
License | http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor CC BY 4.0 |
LinkModel | DirectLink |
MergedId | FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c5351-20df7219825d8663e5b16480b23777229ece5cd44967166751e2b4eeda5742653 |
Notes | ArticleID:BJEP151 istex:5E9DFF095009A11FA6EA6DBFC262E261AF5AC1F5 ark:/67375/WNG-ZSDR9WMW-7 ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 14 content type line 23 ObjectType-Article-2 ObjectType-Feature-1 |
PMID | 12639276 |
PQID | 216957869 |
PQPubID | 32346 |
PageCount | 22 |
ParticipantIDs | proquest_miscellaneous_85580942 proquest_miscellaneous_85345330 proquest_miscellaneous_73101928 proquest_miscellaneous_57148896 proquest_journals_216957869 pubmed_primary_12639276 pascalfrancis_primary_14751409 crossref_primary_10_1348_000709903762869905 crossref_citationtrail_10_1348_000709903762869905 wiley_primary_10_1348_000709903762869905_BJEP151 istex_primary_ark_67375_WNG_ZSDR9WMW_7 |
ProviderPackageCode | CITATION AAYXX |
PublicationCentury | 2000 |
PublicationDate | March 2003 |
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD | 2003-03-01 |
PublicationDate_xml | – month: 03 year: 2003 text: March 2003 |
PublicationDecade | 2000 |
PublicationPlace | Oxford, UK |
PublicationPlace_xml | – name: Oxford, UK – name: Leicester – name: England |
PublicationTitle | British journal of educational psychology |
PublicationTitleAlternate | Br J Educ Psychol |
PublicationYear | 2003 |
Publisher | Blackwell Publishing Ltd British Psychological Society |
Publisher_xml | – name: Blackwell Publishing Ltd – name: British Psychological Society |
SSID | ssj0005734 |
Score | 1.7643068 |
Snippet | Background: Students who have limited skills in decoding and comprehension and who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties... Students who have limited skills in decoding and comprehension and who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be... Examined the effects of a modified reciprocal teaching intervention for readers with poor decoding skills and poor comprehension. Tape-assisted reciprocal... Students who have limited skills in decoding & comprehension & who lack motivation to read present difficulties for practitioners. Difficulties may be... |
SourceID | proquest pubmed pascalfrancis crossref wiley istex |
SourceType | Aggregation Database Index Database Enrichment Source Publisher |
StartPage | 37 |
SubjectTerms | Biological and medical sciences Bootstrap methods Child Cognition Cognitive strategies Comprehension Decoding Decoding skills Early Reading Educational psychology Follow-Up Studies Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology Grade 4 Humans Metacognition Motivation New Zealand Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry Psychology. Psychophysiology Psychopedagogics. Didactics Reading Reading Achievement Reading Comprehension Reading Deficiencies Reading disabled children Reading Failure Reading Skills Reading Strategies Reciprocal Reciprocal Teaching Remedial Reading Surveys and Questionnaires Tape Recording Tape recordings Teaching Teaching - methods Videotape Recordings Vocabulary Development |
Title | Tape-assisted reciprocal teaching: Cognitive bootstrapping for poor decoders |
URI | https://api.istex.fr/ark:/67375/WNG-ZSDR9WMW-7/fulltext.pdf https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1348%2F000709903762869905 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12639276 https://www.proquest.com/docview/216957869 https://www.proquest.com/docview/57148896 https://www.proquest.com/docview/73101928 https://www.proquest.com/docview/85345330 https://www.proquest.com/docview/85580942 |
Volume | 73 |
hasFullText | 1 |
inHoldings | 1 |
isFullTextHit | |
isPrint | |
link | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwjV1LbxMxELagufSCoLyWQtgD4oJW7MNer7mgpk2oKhpVpVUiLpZf2wMoSbOpVP49M15nQwWNuGwOO_Hujmfsb-zPM4S8cyotdKFpwo3lCdWKJZoJm5is5toaltZ-aeB0XB5f0pMpmwZuThNolesx0Q_Udm5wjfxjnpUCrKsUnxfXCRaNws3VUEHjIen5zGVgznzKNwwPXrRJmHE1DsKKcGamoBWeX-C4JQTulUObAqvX_TEv9VDFt8iTVA2oqm5rXPwLhN7FtH5SGj0mjwKajA_a7n9CHrjZHhZiDqSNPbLbDXC_npKvF2rhEkDL-FwbY14LnL-ggVXgVH6KD9d0ohjg9wrXQTCBw1UM2DZezOFiHZ6CXzbPyOVoeHF4nIRqColhBcvAHWwN4Z6AkNBWgDMc0xAqVanOCw4QOxfOOGYspaKEGAriiMzlmsIUqhiEzyUrnpOd2XzmXpI4BTFeA7JUmaGCFkqpLHfUWq6zqhY8Itlal9KEVONY8eKn9PtntJJ_6z8iH7r_LNpEG1ul3_su6kTV8gdS1DiTk_EX-f3b0bmYnE4kvEr_Th9u2qbwhRDcRmR_3akyuG8jO2OLyNvuLvgdbqaomZvfNJJxCCQrUd4vwQE5A36u7pcAqESR3btNglUQgOcRedHa2-b9c8CWOYfnp94A_0NpcnAyPAOE92rrJ--TXU9Y9Dy712RntbxxbwB4rXTfu1ef9A4GR4MR_A6G47Pz39PpJyo |
linkProvider | ProQuest |
linkToHtml | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwtV1LbxMxELaq5EAvCMprKbR7AC5oxa7XXq-REKJtStomUVVSperF2Gsvh1ZJyKaC_ij-IzP7SKigEZde9rKzD3vGM9_Y8yDkldNhbGLDApFZETCjeWC4tEEW5cLYjId5uTXQHyTdU3Z4xs_WyK8mFwbDKhudWCpqO8lwj_wdjRIJ0pXIj9PvATaNwsPVpoNGJRVH7voHeGzFh4M9YO9rSvc7w91uUDcVCDIe8wikwubg9UjwjGwK5tZxAx5DGhoaC0CaVLrM8cwyJhNwJQBOR44aBpZEc_AiE2wSARq_zTChtUXaO53B8ckypkTEVdln3P8DR6bO0olZihkTAg-hYEFTGIXEfnl_WMI2MvUnRmbqApiTV101_gV7b6Lo0gzuPyD3a_zqf6oE7iFZc-MNbP1ch4lskPWFSr1-RHpDPXUB4HP8rvWxkgZaTHjBvI7ifO_vNgFMPgD-Oe68YMmIbz6gaX86gYt1mHc_Kx6T0zuZ6iekNZ6M3TPih0AmcsCyOsqYZLHWOqKOWStMlOZSeCRq5lJldXFz7LFxqcoTO5aqv-ffI28Xz0yr0h4rqd-ULFqQ6tkFBsUJrkaDz-r8y96JHPVHCn5l6wYPl-9mMEJwpz2y2TBV1QqjUAvx9sj24i6sdDy-0WM3uSoUF-C6pjK5nUIAVgfEnt5OAeCMYTzxKgqegstPPfK0krfl_1NAs1TA98NSAP9j0tTOYecYMOXzlUPeJve6w35P9Q4GR5tkvQyXLKP8XpDWfHblXgLsm5uterH55Otdr-_fldxfOw |
linkToPdf | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwtV3LbhMxFLWqVkLdICivUGhnAWzQqBmPPR4jIQRNQ59RBa0SsTGesYcFKAlJKuin8XecO4-EChqx6WY2c-dh34fPtY99GXvmbTvO4kyEKncqFJmVYSa1C_OoUJnLZbsopwZOesn-uTgcyMEK-9XshSFaZRMTy0DtRjnNke_wKNGwrkTvFDUr4rTTfTP-HlIBKVpobappVBZy5C9_IHubvj7oQNXPOe_une3uh3WBgTCXsYxgIa5ABqSRJbkUQ6-XGbKHtJ3xWAF1cu1zL3MnhE6QVgBaR55nAqOKlcgoEyoYgei_pmKAKriSGqgFu0TF1QHQNBOIlKberxOLlPZOKFqOgmtztEdT5bw_xsQ1Uu9P4mjaKdRUVPU1_gWAr-LpckDs3mG3ayQbvK1M7y5b8cMNKgJdE0Y22Po8uF7eY8dnduxDIHX6rgvoTA0aO_GCWc3nfBXsNlSmANB_RnMwdHjElwC4OhiPcHGeduBPpvfZ-Y109AO2OhwN_SMWtCGmCqBaG-VCi9haG3EvnFNZlBZatVjU9KXJ62POqdrGN1Ou3YnU_N3_LfZy_sy4OuRjqfSLUkVzUTv5SvQ4JU2_9958-tj5oPsnfYNf2bqiw8W7BVqIxLrFNhulmjp0TM3c0Ftse34XPk8LOXboRxdTIxWS2FQn10sooHZg9_R6CcA0QcziZRIyRfLPW-xhZW-L_-fAtVzh--3SAP-j08y7w71ToMvHS5u8zW7Bq83xQe9ok62XvMmS7veErc4mF_4p8N8s2yo9LWCfb9q1fwNod2IC |
openUrl | ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Tape-assisted+reciprocal+teaching%3A+cognitive+bootstrapping+for+poor+decoders&rft.jtitle=British+journal+of+educational+psychology&rft.au=Le+Fevre%2C+Deidre+M&rft.au=Moore%2C+Dennis+W&rft.au=Wilkinson%2C+Ian+A+G&rft.date=2003-03-01&rft.issn=0007-0998&rft.volume=73&rft.issue=Pt+1&rft.spage=37&rft_id=info:doi/10.1348%2F000709903762869905&rft.externalDBID=NO_FULL_TEXT |
thumbnail_l | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=0007-0998&client=summon |
thumbnail_m | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=0007-0998&client=summon |
thumbnail_s | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=0007-0998&client=summon |