Angela Hairrell
Texas A&M University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Angela Hairrell.
Reading & Writing Quarterly | 2016
Elizabeth Swanson; Jeanne Wanzek; Lisa V. McCulley; Stephanie J. Stillman-Spisak; Sharon Vaughn; Deborah C. Simmons; Melissa Fogarty; Angela Hairrell
This study reports vocabulary and reading comprehension instructional practices implemented in middle and high school social studies and language arts classrooms. It also describes text reading practices. We conducted 137 observations of 11 social studies and 9 language arts teachers over the course of 1 academic year. We observed instructional practices supportive of vocabulary and reading comprehension to differing degrees in social studies and language arts. The proportion of time spent reading text was roughly the same across the 2 subjects, with differences by text type, reading mode, and grade level within both subject areas.
Journal of Learning Disabilities | 2014
Elizabeth Swanson; Angela Hairrell; Shawn C. Kent; Stephen Ciullo; Jeanne Wanzek; Sharon Vaughn
A synthesis and meta-analysis of the extant research on the effects of reading interventions delivered using social studies content for students with learning disabilities in kindergarten through Grade 12 is provided. A total of 27 studies met criteria for the synthesis, with 16 studies providing sufficient data for inclusion in the meta-analysis. Reading interventions implemented within the context of social studies have employed the use of graphic organizers, mnemonics, reading and answering questions, guided notes, and multicomponent comprehension instruction. The overall mean effect size for interventions included in the meta-analysis was 1.02, indicating that reading interventions delivered using social studies content have a substantial positive effect on outcomes among students with learning disabilities.
Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness | 2010
Deborah C. Simmons; Angela Hairrell; Meaghan Edmonds; Sharon Vaughn; Ross Larsen; Victor L. Willson; William H. Rupley; Glenda Byrns
Abstract In this study, we compared the effects of two experimental multiple-strategy approaches (content-area comprehension and vocabulary) to typical fourth-grade social studies instructional practices. An 18-week, cluster-randomized study was conducted to estimate effects measured by normative-referenced reading comprehension and vocabulary measures and researcher- and district-developed measures of social studies vocabulary and content. Forty-eight teachers and their respective 903 students from 15 schools were randomly assigned by school to one of three conditions: content vocabulary, content reading comprehension, or typical practice. Experimental teachers participated in 6 professional development sessions over 21 weeks. Structural equation modeling results indicated reliable differences favoring both experimental conditions over typical practice on the social studies content measure and substantively important effects on content and standardized vocabulary measures. Students in the vocabulary intervention also outperformed typical practice peers on the curriculum-based vocabulary assessment. Effects of the comprehension and vocabulary conditions were comparable except for the significant effect of vocabulary on the curriculum-based vocabulary measure. Effect sizes for teaching quality on the standardized comprehension measure ranged from d = .26 to .32; however, these effects were not statistically significant.
Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness | 2014
Deborah C. Simmons; Melissa Fogarty; Eric L. Oslund; Leslie E. Simmons; Angela Hairrell; John L. Davis; Leah Anderson; Nathan H. Clemens; Sharon Vaughn; Greg Roberts; Stephanie Stillman; Anna-Mária Fall
Abstract In this experimental study we examined the effects of integrating teacher-directed knowledge-building and student-regulated comprehension practices in 7th- to 10th-grade English language arts classes. We also investigated the effect of instructional quality and whether integrating practices differentially benefitted students with lower entry-level reading comprehension. The study was conducted in 6 schools, involving 17 teachers and 921 students. Teachers’ English language arts classes were randomly assigned to intervention (n = 36) or typical practice comparison (n = 29) conditions, and all teachers taught in both conditions. Students in both conditions grew significantly from pretest to posttest on proximal measures of narrative (ES =.09) and expository comprehension (ES =.22), as well as a standardized distal comprehension measure (ES =.46); however, no statistically significant between-group differences were found. Although intervention fidelity did not significantly influence outcomes, observational data indicated that teachers increasingly incorporated comprehension practices in their typical instruction. Effect sizes indicated a differential influence of entry-level reading comprehension on proximal and distal comprehension with higher performing readers in the intervention condition benefiting more than their lower performing peers on expository comprehension.
Intervention In School And Clinic | 2011
Angela Hairrell; Deborah C. Simmons; Elizabeth Swanson; Meaghan Edmonds; Sharon Vaughn; William H. Rupley
In the upper elementary grades, content-area text gains increasing importance as a primary source of reading and information. This article focuses on the specialized vocabulary demands of social studies texts and presents a framework of teaching and learning strategies based on vocabulary research. Strategies are introduced before, during, and after social studies text reading, illustrating how to develop and relate vocabulary knowledge to social studies concepts and content.
Intervention In School And Clinic | 2011
Elizabeth Swanson; Meaghan Edmonds; Angela Hairrell; Sharon Vaughn; Deborah C. Simmons
Upper elementary content-area teachers often face the challenge of how to make content-area text more accessible and learnable for their students. Whereas there exists a range of comprehension strategies that can be applied to informational text, the premium on instructional time leaves teachers in search of a cohesive, efficient, and effective set of comprehension strategies that can be applied to existing textbook materials. In this article, a set of reading comprehension strategies designed for informational readings in social studies textbooks will be described. A description of each strategy is followed by a timeline for introduction and techniques for increasing task difficulty over time.
Case reports in pediatrics | 2015
Rachel Bramson; Angela Hairrell
This case study presents a patient living in a suburban/rural community who received appropriate referral to secondary and tertiary care for nausea and vomiting, accompanied by waxing and waning neurological symptoms, yet proved difficult to diagnose. This patient is presented to draw attention to a rare neurological disorder which should be included in the differential diagnosis of nausea and vomiting with some key neurological complaints, even in the absence of physical findings.
Literacy Research and Instruction | 2011
Angela Hairrell; William H. Rupley; Deborah C. Simmons
Reading & Writing Quarterly | 2011
Angela Hairrell; William H. Rupley; Meaghan Edmonds; Ross Larsen; Deborah C. Simmons; Victor L. Willson; Glenda Byrns; Sharon Vaughn
Medical science educator | 2016
Angela Hairrell; Sherry Smith; Dave McIntosh; Diane E. Chico