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This book explores how technology can foster interaction between
children and their peers, teachers and other adults. It presents
the Co-EnACT framework to explain how technology can support
children to collaborate, so helping them to learn and engage
enjoyably with the world, in both work and play. The focus is on
children, rather than young people, but the principles of
supporting interaction apply throughout all life stages. Chapters
on classrooms and on autism explain principles behind using
technology in ways that support, rather than obstruct, social
interaction in diverse populations. Collaborative interaction
involves both verbal and non-verbal behaviour and this book
presents evidence from closely analysing children's behaviour in
natural settings. Examples from cutting-edge technology illustrate
principles applicable to more widely-available technology. The book
will be of interest to psychologists, educators, researchers in
Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), particularly those designing with
children in mind, and practitioners working with children who want
to deepen their understanding of using technology for
collaboration.
This book explores how technology can foster interaction between
children and their peers, teachers and other adults. It presents
the Co-EnACT framework to explain how technology can support
children to collaborate, so helping them to learn and engage
enjoyably with the world, in both work and play. The focus is on
children, rather than young people, but the principles of
supporting interaction apply throughout all life stages. Chapters
on classrooms and on autism explain principles behind using
technology in ways that support, rather than obstruct, social
interaction in diverse populations. Collaborative interaction
involves both verbal and non-verbal behaviour and this book
presents evidence from closely analysing children's behaviour in
natural settings. Examples from cutting-edge technology illustrate
principles applicable to more widely-available technology. The book
will be of interest to psychologists, educators, researchers in
Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), particularly those designing with
children in mind, and practitioners working with children who want
to deepen their understanding of using technology for
collaboration.
Although some young children can read aloud with apparent fluency,
they fail to understand fully or remember connected discourse. Much
research on reading has focused on problems at the word recognition
level and less attention has been given to comprehension
difficulties. The authors of this 1991 work observed that teachers
usually monitored reading ability by listening to children read
aloud, or by using reading tests that concentrate on word
recognition skills. Thus, comprehension problems could go
unnoticed. The authors provide an introduction and an overview of
adult and child text comprehension. They then describe their own
research on children who have a specific comprehension deficit.
Such children have difficulties in making inferences from text, in
using working memory to integrate information into a coherent
mental model and in reflecting on their own comprehension. The
authors relate these findings to educational practice and make
suggestions for comprehension improvement. Psychologists and
educators will welcome this presentation of fresh, thorough
research on an important topic.
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