Medication Guide Reading Behaviors and Attitudes Among Subjects With Migraine, Asthma, or COPD

2015 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 377-386
Author(s):  
Kristen B. Bibeau ◽  
Rachael L. DiSantostefano ◽  
David Hinds
Author(s):  
Donald Berry ◽  
Jasmine M. Schmitt ◽  
Carol G. Vetterly

2018 ◽  
Vol 52 ◽  
pp. 02001
Author(s):  
Maryem Larhmaid

The widespread use of digital resources, the Internet and the development of technology have brought several significant changes in reading practices, preferences and use among information consumers. Readers of the 21st century have many options for reading thanks to the rapid growth of electronic-based reading materials, instead of printed ones, such as online newspapers, electronic books, digital encyclopedias, and online academic journals, as well as the expansion of e-book readers. All of these have contributed to changing readers’ reading strategies, reading preferences, and attitudes toward the act of reading. In the field of academia, for instance, there has been a tremendous shift from paper-based reading to screen-based reading. Given the fact that digital devices have become pervasive, and that reading has recently become a digital activity, this article proposes the need to investigate the impact of print vs. digital reading materials on Moroccan undergraduate students’ reading behaviors, preferences and use.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chien-Hong Chao ◽  
Huey-Wen Chou ◽  
Chih-Hao Tu

With the popularity of the Internet and the development of information technology, digital reading has affected human reading styles. In essence, digital reading is different from conventional reading in many ways. The aim of this research focuses primarily on exploring the differences in reading behaviors among different digital reading devices. Results reveal that the reading experience on the Tablet PC is superior to that on the other two digital devices. Subjects in the Tablet PC group demonstrate the highest preference in terms of depth reading which implies that Tablet PC should be the most appropriate device for digital learning platform in the future. Discussion and suggestions are in the conclusions at the end of this paper. 


Author(s):  
Anita Kurniawati Hadiyanto

As the nature of Extensive Reading (ER) emphasizes the reading activity, most ER follow up activities are developed to support the act of reading. This might neglect the fact that reading can also be a stimulus for creative and imaginative writing. Although ER has a potential role to develop students’ L2 writing, not many have explored it. This preliminary study investigates a writing project undertaken as a post-ER activity. This project was done at the end of an ER program in an EFL context. In this project, the students worked collaboratively to write a 1,000-word short story. The study examined how the ER teachers and ER students in the study perceived the story writing project. Data were gathered from semi-structured interviews with three ER teachers and six ER students. Findings showed that both the teachers and students perceived the story writing project as beneficial to enhance the students’ creativity and imagination. They also agreed on the connection between reading and writing. The quality of the story was perceived to be significantly influenced by the students’ reading behaviors. Practical suggestions on how to integrate this project into an ER program were also offered.


2015 ◽  
Vol 117 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-36
Author(s):  
Hyo Jin Lim ◽  
Mimi Bong ◽  
Yeon-Kyoung Woo

Background Among the factors known to influence reading development and performance, attitude toward reading is shown to be particularly critical for developing learners. Reading attitude enhances independent reading, levels of engagement in classroom reading activities, and the amount and variety of topics in reading, which in turn influence reading skills and strategies. Reading attitude is an important element in students’ active engagement and achievement in reading. Purpose The first purpose of this study was to test whether Korean students’ home literacy resources, parental support and parents’ reading attitude, and teachers’ use of instructional strategies in relation to reading could predict Korean students’ reading attitude. The second purpose was to test a model linking family- and school-related factors, reading attitude, and reading behaviors and learning strategy use as outcomes. Specifically, we hypothesized that positive and negative attitudes toward reading would mediate the relationships between home, parent, and teacher variables and reading outcomes. Design Using a nationally representative sample from the PISA 2009 database, we tested two structural equation models. Because there were two categories of outcomes examined in this study, we fitted the model separately for each outcome category. The first model (Reading Behavior Model) included reading activities such as reading for enjoyment, reading diversity, and online reading as outcome variables. The second model (Learning Strategy Model) shared the same model structure with the first one except that the outcome variables were use of learning strategies such as memorization, elaboration, and control. In both models, reading attitudes were hypothesized to mediate the relationship between contextual factors (i.e. gender, home resources, parental and teacher influences) and the reading/learning outcomes. Conclusions Gender, books and other types of literacy resources in the home, and parents’ attitudes toward reading functioned as consistent predictors of Korean students’ positive and negative attitudes toward reading. Among the contextual factors, parents’ reading attitude and parental support for reading directly as well as indirectly predicted students’ reading behaviors via students’ reading attitude. Parental support for reading and teachers’ instruction and assignment strategies in reading directly predicted students’ use of learning strategies as well. Positive attitudes toward reading also predicted students’ use of memorization, elaboration, and control strategies. Thus, reading attitude was an important mediator between parent- and teacher-related contextual factors and reading/learning engagement of Korean adolescents.


This chapter presents a discussion of varying experiences of intervention sessions with struggling readers. It includes vignettes of children at the elementary level who are at risk for reading failure due to struggles in one or more conceptual areas of learning how to read. The vignettes highlight some opportunities that exist within an intervention session to develop effective strategies for strengthening literacy skills. This chapter focuses on pedagogical methodologies in literacy instruction and intervention, working directly with struggling readers. The vignettes of reading behaviors of struggling readers illustrate how literacy instruction and intervention uses tools for developmentally appropriate literacy intervention strategies built upon the literature related to a balanced and comprehensive literacy framework presented in the previous chapters. Furthermore, this chapter includes effectively designed strategies to help children strengthen literacy skills and discussions about literacy intervention experiences based on these individual case studies of struggling readers.


Decades ago, Lev S. Vygotsky introduced us to a view of learning and development, and how they are interconnected, which has supported our understanding of how children learn new things. This view has been the foundation for a tool used for teaching to this day. This chapter visits the zone of proximal development (ZPD) and examines the view of the traditional approach to literacy instruction, designed to support emerging as well as struggling readers. It describes the gulf between those tasks children have mastered in their literacy development and new tasks to be introduced with scaffolded support. It references the observation of children's reading behaviors during instruction and identify interactions that suggest behaviors requiring attention to being solidly in the child's ZPD. The chapter concludes with a discussion about the connection between research and instructional practices.


AERA Open ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 233285841985984 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tanya Christ ◽  
X. Christine Wang ◽  
Ming Ming Chiu ◽  
Ekaterina Strekalova-Hughes

Given the increasing use of app books with young children, research is needed to inform their selection and design. Although broad guidelines exist, more fine-grained guidance is needed. To address this need, we explored the relations among app books’ digital affordances, readers’ behaviors with these affordances during both buddy and individual reading sessions, and their individual outcomes. Fifty-three kindergarteners (ages 5.05–6.46 years; M = 5.60, SD = 0.42) read 12 app books twice each across 24 buddy reading sessions and four app books once each across four individual reading sessions, and their comprehension was assessed after each individual reading session. Multivariate, mixed response analysis found that (a) when a greater number of minimum hotspots were available per page, retelling was better; and (b) availability of word hotspots was linked to better critical thinking/inference outcomes. Implications include choosing app books with affordances that this study showed support particular reading outcomes, in alignment with instructional goals.


1992 ◽  
Vol 86 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
A J. Koenig ◽  
C.A. Layton ◽  
D.B. Ross

This study explored the value of an objective procedure to evaluate the relative effectiveness of reading large print and reading regular print with low vision devices for six students with low vision. Data on observable reading behaviors—oral and silent reading rates, working distance, and oral reading miscues—were collected and analyzed using a case-study approach. The procedure provided useful information for consideration by multidisciplinary teams.


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