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| Format: | Recurso educativo Open Access |
| Language: | en |
| Published: |
2007
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ786398 |
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| _version_ | 1867181426214961152 |
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| author | Jones, Leigh Ann |
| author_facet | Jones, Leigh Ann Jones, Leigh Ann |
| collection | Education Resources Information Center |
| contents | The Great Cover-Up Jones, Leigh Ann Recreational Reading Measures (Individuals) School Libraries Literature Appreciation Fiction Middle School Students Adolescent Literature Questionnaires Reading Material Selection Illustrations Student Attitudes In the spring of 2005, the author created a short, online questionnaire to capture data about middle schoolers and book covers, and after several pilot studies she posted it to SurveyMonkey.com. The study includes the fiction books for middle school from the 2005 Quick Picks list. Over the course of a week, participants reported to the school library to complete the short online questionnaire. Using a list of nine factors gleaned from the pilot studies, students checked how they "usually," "sometimes", or "rarely" select fiction books from the school library. They responded to the potential appeal of the covers from the fiction Quick Picks, and the results were analyzed quantitatively. For the students in this study, covers impacted their selection of fiction books more than any other factor. The nine factors that most impacted student selection, in order from greatest to least, were: cover; title; reading the cover's flap copy, summary, and/or other text; genre; recommendation from a friend; recommendation from a librarian; series; length; author. Possibly the biggest eye-opener in the study is that no significant difference exists for gender, grade level, or the level of reading enjoyment. Covers are the number one factor that impact the selection of fiction books no matter if the student is a boy or girl. Covers have the same effect on sixth, seventh and eighth graders. Covers are the top choice no matter whether the student states that he loves to read, likes to read, or doesn't like to read. |
| format | Recurso educativo Open Access |
| id | eric_EJ786398 |
| institution | ERIC Institute of Education Sciences |
| language | en |
| publishDate | 2007 |
| record_format | eric |
| spellingShingle | The Great Cover-Up Jones, Leigh Ann Recreational Reading Measures (Individuals) School Libraries Literature Appreciation Fiction Middle School Students Adolescent Literature Questionnaires Reading Material Selection Illustrations Student Attitudes The Great Cover-Up Jones, Leigh Ann Recreational Reading Measures (Individuals) School Libraries Literature Appreciation Fiction Middle School Students Adolescent Literature Questionnaires Reading Material Selection Illustrations Student Attitudes In the spring of 2005, the author created a short, online questionnaire to capture data about middle schoolers and book covers, and after several pilot studies she posted it to SurveyMonkey.com. The study includes the fiction books for middle school from the 2005 Quick Picks list. Over the course of a week, participants reported to the school library to complete the short online questionnaire. Using a list of nine factors gleaned from the pilot studies, students checked how they "usually," "sometimes", or "rarely" select fiction books from the school library. They responded to the potential appeal of the covers from the fiction Quick Picks, and the results were analyzed quantitatively. For the students in this study, covers impacted their selection of fiction books more than any other factor. The nine factors that most impacted student selection, in order from greatest to least, were: cover; title; reading the cover's flap copy, summary, and/or other text; genre; recommendation from a friend; recommendation from a librarian; series; length; author. Possibly the biggest eye-opener in the study is that no significant difference exists for gender, grade level, or the level of reading enjoyment. Covers are the number one factor that impact the selection of fiction books no matter if the student is a boy or girl. Covers have the same effect on sixth, seventh and eighth graders. Covers are the top choice no matter whether the student states that he loves to read, likes to read, or doesn't like to read. |
| title | The Great Cover-Up |
| topic | Recreational Reading Measures (Individuals) School Libraries Literature Appreciation Fiction Middle School Students Adolescent Literature Questionnaires Reading Material Selection Illustrations Student Attitudes |
| url | https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ786398 |