Magical Thinking, Causation and Prediction: Psycholinguistic Implications for Reading Skills in Disturbed Children

Operant magical thinking (belief that thought can significantly alter reality) and reading comprehension were examined in samples of Pupils 7 to 13 years old identified as either gifted, normal, or emotionally disturbed. Sixty-eight children were sampled in a school for gifted children, in a regular...

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description Operant magical thinking (belief that thought can significantly alter reality) and reading comprehension were examined in samples of Pupils 7 to 13 years old identified as either gifted, normal, or emotionally disturbed. Sixty-eight children were sampled in a school for gifted children, in a regular suburban elementary school, and in an in-patient residential treatment center. A reading miscue inventory was used to analyze oral reading comprehension skills. Children with lower levels of operant magical thinking scored higher in comprehension; those with higher levels of magical thinking scored lower in comprehension. Gifted children demonstrated less magical thinking and better reading comprehension; distrubed children showed more magical thinking and less adequate reading comprehension. Regardless of population, magical thinking was significantly related to reading comprehension processes. (Author/AA)
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Sixty-eight children were sampled in a school for gifted children, in a regular suburban elementary school, and in an in-patient residential treatment center. A reading miscue inventory was used to analyze oral reading comprehension skills. Children with lower levels of operant magical thinking scored higher in comprehension; those with higher levels of magical thinking scored lower in comprehension. Gifted children demonstrated less magical thinking and better reading comprehension; distrubed children showed more magical thinking and less adequate reading comprehension. Regardless of population, magical thinking was significantly related to reading comprehension processes. 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Sixty-eight children were sampled in a school for gifted children, in a regular suburban elementary school, and in an in-patient residential treatment center. A reading miscue inventory was used to analyze oral reading comprehension skills. Children with lower levels of operant magical thinking scored higher in comprehension; those with higher levels of magical thinking scored lower in comprehension. Gifted children demonstrated less magical thinking and better reading comprehension; distrubed children showed more magical thinking and less adequate reading comprehension. Regardless of population, magical thinking was significantly related to reading comprehension processes. 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Sixty-eight children were sampled in a school for gifted children, in a regular suburban elementary school, and in an in-patient residential treatment center. A reading miscue inventory was used to analyze oral reading comprehension skills. Children with lower levels of operant magical thinking scored higher in comprehension; those with higher levels of magical thinking scored lower in comprehension. Gifted children demonstrated less magical thinking and better reading comprehension; distrubed children showed more magical thinking and less adequate reading comprehension. Regardless of population, magical thinking was significantly related to reading comprehension processes. (Author/AA)</abstract><tpages>9</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Cognitive Processes
Elementary Education
Emotional Disturbances
Gifted
Handicapped Children
Magical Thinking
Miscue Analysis
Oral Reading
Reading Comprehension
Reading Processes
Reading Research
title Magical Thinking, Causation and Prediction: Psycholinguistic Implications for Reading Skills in Disturbed Children
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