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Featured researches published by Ana Taboada.


Journal of Educational Psychology | 2004

Increasing Reading Comprehension and Engagement through Concept-Oriented Reading Instruction.

John T. Guthrie; Allan Wigfield; Pedro Barbosa; Kathleen C. Perencevich; Ana Taboada; Marcia H. Davis; Nicole T. Scafiddi; Stephen Tonks

Based on an engagement perspective of reading development, we investigated the extent to which an instructional framework of combining motivation support and strategy instruction (Concept-Oriented Reading Instruction—CORI) influenced reading outcomes for third-grade children. In CORI, five motivational practices were integrated with six cognitive strategies for reading comprehension. In the first study, we compared this framework to an instructional framework emphasizing Strategy Instruction (SI), but not including motivation support. In the second study, we compared CORI to SI and to a traditional instruction group (TI), and used additional measures of major constructs. In both studies, class-level analyses showed that students in CORI classrooms were higher than SI and/or TI students on measures of reading comprehension, reading motivation, and reading strategies. A widespread goal of education in the elementary grades is reading comprehension for all students. Reading comprehension becomes especially important in the later elementary grades (Sweet & Snow, 2003) and provides the basis for a substantial amount of learning in secondary school (Kirsch et al., 2002). Without the skills of reading comprehension and the motivation for reading to learn, students’ academic progress is limited (Alvermann & Earle, 2003). In view of the prominence of reading comprehension, a vital issue for educational psychology is investigating the characteristics of effective instruction for reading comprehension (Hiebert & Raphael, 1996). The growing knowledge base about instruction for reading comprehension is rightly directed toward identifying classroom practices with known effects on specific aspects of reading, and a major focus of this research has been on identifying effective reading strategies that increase children’s comprehension (Block & Pressley, 2002; Duke & Pearson, 2002; National Reading Panel, 2000). However, the evidence rests primarily on instructional research in which single cognitive strategies, such as questioning, are taught in controlled experiments. Relatively little investigation has been conducted on how multiple strategies can be combined in long-term comprehension instruction within the classroom, and


Reading Psychology | 2011

Developing Reading Comprehension and Academic Vocabulary for English Language Learners through Science Content: A Formative Experiment.

Ana Taboada; Vanessa Rutherford

This formative experiment explored the extent to which two instructional frameworks that varied in the explicitness of academic vocabulary instruction, comprehension strategy instruction, and supports for student autonomy influenced reading comprehension, vocabulary acquisition, perceptions of autonomy supports, and reading engagement in fourth-grade English-language learners (ELLs). In the contextualized vocabulary instruction (CVI) framework, four reading comprehension strategies were integrated with two autonomy-supportive (motivation) practices and implicit instruction of academic science vocabulary. In the intensified vocabulary instruction (IVI) framework, students experienced explicit instruction of academic science vocabulary in relation to reading, without explicit strategy instruction or attention to autonomy supports. Results indicated that the IVI framework increased students’ academic vocabulary even 3 weeks after the intervention was over, whereas CVI benefited students’ reading comprehension as well as their perceptions of autonomous learning in the classroom. Both quantitative and qualitative results are interpreted under the lens of formative experiments.


Teachers and Teaching | 2012

Teachers' Conceptions of Reading Comprehension and Motivation to Read.

Ana Taboada; Michelle M. Buehl

Given the increasing number of immigrant students in the USA initially schooled in Mexico, Central America, and South America, and the dearth of investigations examining the beliefs of teachers from Mexico, Central America, or South America, an exploration of Latin American teachers’ conceptions may inform policy-makers and researchers about teachers in different cultural contexts and provide insight into the types of instruction Latin American immigrants may have experienced before coming to the USA. Teachers’ conceptions of reading comprehension and motivation to read across two cultural contexts (i.e. the USA and Argentina) were examined by analyzing responses from 21 US teachers and 23 Argentinean teachers. Both groups of teachers held views of reading comprehension in partial agreement with cognitive views of reading comprehension but differed in their views of instructional practices for supporting reading comprehension. Differences also emerged for conceptions of motivation and practices to support motivation to read. Knowledge of teacher views can be used by teacher educators to target misconceptions and further develop teachers’ knowledge and skills related to reading comprehension and motivation to read.


Journal of Educational Research | 2006

Influences of Stimulating Tasks on Reading Motivation and Comprehension

John T. Guthrie; Allan Wigfield; Nicole M. Humenick; Kathleen C. Perencevich; Ana Taboada; Pedro Barbosa


Reading and Writing | 2009

Effects of motivational and cognitive variables on reading comprehension

Ana Taboada; Stephen M. Tonks; Allan Wigfield; John T. Guthrie


Psychology in the Schools | 2008

Role of Reading Engagement in Mediating Effects of Reading Comprehension Instruction on Reading Outcomes.

Allan Wigfield; John T. Guthrie; Kathleen C. Perencevich; Ana Taboada; Susan Lutz Klauda; Angela McRae; Pedro Barbosa


Journal of Literacy Research | 2006

Contributions of Student Questioning and Prior Knowledge to Construction of Knowledge from Reading Information Text

Ana Taboada; John T. Guthrie


Instructional Science | 2012

Relationships of general vocabulary, science vocabulary, and student questioning with science comprehension in students with varying levels of English proficiency

Ana Taboada


Archive | 2011

Developing Self-Regulated Readers through Instruction for Reading Engagement

Stephen M. Tonks; Ana Taboada


Reading & Writing Quarterly | 2013

Mediating Effects of Reading Engagement on the Reading Comprehension of Early Adolescent English Language Learners

Ana Taboada; Dianna Townsend; Mary Jane Boynton

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Stephen M. Tonks

Northern Illinois University

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