Britt, M. A., Rouet, J-F., & Durik, A. M. (in press). Literacy Beyond Text Comprehension. A Theory of Purposeful Reading. NY, NY: Routledge.
Goldman, S. R., Blair, A., & Burkett, C. (in press). Assessment of multiple resource comprehension and information problem solving. In J. L. G. Braasch & I. Bråten, & M. T. McCrudden (Eds.), Handbook of multiple source use. NY, NY: Routledge.
Goldman, S. R., & Brand-Gruwel, S. (in press). Learning from multiple sources in a digital society. In F. Fischer, C. E. Hmelo-Silver, S. R. Goldman, & P. Reimann (Eds.). International handbook of the learning sciences. NY, NY: Routledge/Taylor & Francis.
Wiley, J., Jaeger, A. J., & Griffin, T. D. (in press). Effects of task instructions on comprehension from multiple sources in history and science. To appear in J. L. G. Braasch, I. Bråten, & M. T. McCrudden (Eds.) Handbook of multiple source use. NY, NY: Routledge.
Wiley, J., Hastings, P., Blaum, D., Jaeger, A. J., Hughes, S., Wallace, P., Griffin, T. D., & Britt, M. A. (2017). Different approaches to assessing the quality of explanations following a multiple-document inquiry activity in science. International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education.
Burkett, C., & Goldman, S. R. (2016). “Getting the point” of literature: Relationships between processing and interpretation. Discourse Processes. 53(5-6), 457-487.
Hastings, P., Hughes, S., Blaum, D., Wallace, P., & Britt, M. A. (2016, June). Stratified Learning for Reducing Training Set Size. In International Conference on Intelligent Tutoring Systems (pp. 341-346). Springer International Publishing.
Lee, C. D., Goldman, S. R., Levine, S., & Magliano, J. P. (2016). Epistemic cognition in literary reasoning. In J. Green, W. Sandoval, & J. Bråten (Eds.), Handbook of Epistemic Cognition, (pp. 165-183). NY: Routledge.
Goldman, S. R. (2015). Reading and the web: broadening the need for complex comprehension In R. J. Spiro, M. DeSchryver, M. S. Hagerman, P. Morsink, & P. Thompson (Eds.), Reading at a crossroads? Disjunctures and continuities in current conceptions and practices. (pp. 89-103). New York, NY: Routledge.
Goldman, S. R., McCarthy, K., & Burkett, C. (2015). Interpretative inferences in literature. In E. O’Brien A. Cook, & R. Lorch (Eds.), Inferences during reading, (pp. 386-415). Boston, MA: Cambridge Oxford University Press.
Goldman, S. R., & Snow, C. (2015). Adolescent literacy: development and instruction. To appear in A. Pollatsek & R. Treiman (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of reading, (pp. 463-478). NY: Cambridge Oxford University Press.
Higgs, K., Magliano, J.P., Vidal-Abarca, E., Martínez, T., & McNamara, D.S. (2015). Bridging skill and task oriented reading. Discourse Processes. doi:10.1080/0163853X.2015.1100572
McCarthy, K. S. (2015). Reading beyond the lines: A critical review of cognitive approaches to literary interpretation and comprehension. Scientific Study of Literature, 5(1), 99-128. doi:10.1075/ssol.5.1.05mcc
McCarthy, K. S., & Goldman, S. R. (2015). Comprehension of short stories: Effects of task instructions on literary interpretation. Discourse Processes, 52, 585-608. doi:10.1080/0163853X.2014.967610
Shanahan, C. & Shanahan, T. (2015). The what and why of disciplinary literacy. In M. Hougan (Ed.), Fundamentals of literacy instruction and assessment, 6-12 (pp. 127-140). Baltimore, MD: Paul E. Bookes Publishing Company.
Brock, C. H., Goatley, V. J., Raphael, T. E., Trost-Shahata, E., & Weber, K. (2014). Engaging elementary students in disciplinary learning and literacyK-6: Reading, writing, and teaching tools for the classroom. New York, NY: Teachers College Press.
Connor, C. M, Goldman, S. R., & Fishman, B. (2014). Technologies that support students’ literacy development. In J. M. Spector, M. D Merrill, J. Elen, & M. J. Bishop (Eds.), Handbook of Research on Educational Communications and Technology, 4th Edition (pp. 591-604). NY: Springer.
de Pereyra, G., Britt, M. A., Braasch, J. L. G., & Rouet, J. F. (2014). Reader’s memory for information sources in simple news stories: Effects of text and task features. Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 26, 187-204. doi:10.1080/20445911.2013.879152
James, K., Goldman, S. R., Ko, M., Greenleaf, C. L., & Brown, W. (2014). Multiple-Text Processing in Text-Based Scientific Inquiry. Proceedings of the 11th International Conference of the Learning Sciences, Boulder, CO.
Lee, C. D. (2014). Reading gaps and complications of scientific studies of learning. In S. Harper (Ed.), The Elusive Quest for Civil Rights in Education: Evidence-Based Perspectives from Leading Scholars on the 50th Anniversary of the Civil Rights Act (pp. 14-16). Philadelphia, PA: Center for the Study of Race and Equity in Education. The University of Pennsylvania.
Medin, D., Lee, C. D., & Bang, M. (2014). Particular points of View. Scientific American, 311(4), 44-45. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican1014-44
Nasir, N., Roseberry, A., Warren, B., & Lee, C. D. (2014). Learning as a cultural process: Achieving equity through diversity. In K. Sawyer (Ed.), The Cambridge handbook of the learning sciences (2nd Edition) (pp. 489-504). Cambridge University Press.
Raphael, T. E., Vasquez, J. M., Fortune, A. J., Gavelek, J. R., & Au, J. H. (2014). Sociocultural approaches to professional development: Supporting sustainable school change. In L. E. Martin, S. Kragler, D. J. Quatroche, & K. L. Bauserman (Eds.), The handbook of professional development: Successful models and practices, Pre-K-12 (pp. 145–173). New York: Guilford.
Rouet, J. F. & Britt, M. A. (2014). Multimedia learning from multiple documents. In R. Mayer (Ed.), Cambridge handbook of multimedia learning (2nd Edition) (pp. 813-841). NY, NY: Cambridge University Press.
Shanahan, C. (2014). Reading and writing across multiple texts. In K. A. Hinchman & H. K. Sheridan-Thomas (Eds.), Best Practices in Adolescent Literacy Instruction (pp.169-190). New York, NY: Guilford Press.
Shanahan, T. & Shanahan, C. (2014). Teaching history and literacy. In K. A. Hinchman & H. Sheridan-Thomas (Eds.), Best practices in adolescent literacy instruction (pp. 232-248). New York, NY: Guilford Press.
Wiley, J., Sanchez, C. A., & Jaeger, A. J. (2014). Individual differences in working memory capacity principles for multimedia learning. In R. Mayer (Ed.), The Cambridge handbook of multimedia learning (2nd ed., pp. 598-619). New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
Wiley, J., Steffens, B., Britt, M.A., & Griffin, T. D. (2014). Writing to learn from multiple-source inquiry activities in history. In G. Rijlaarsdam (Series Ed.) and P. Klein, P. Boscolo, C. Gelati, & L. Kilpatrick (Volume Eds.), Studies in writing, writing as a learning activity (pp. 120-148). England: Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
Britt, M. A., Goldman, S. R., & Rouet, J-F. (2013). Foreword. In M. A. Britt, S. R. Goldman, and J. F. Rouet (Eds.). Reading: from words to multiple texts (pp. viii-xiv). NY: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
Chan, G., Ray, M., Armstrong S. L., & Magliano, J. P. (2013, November). Do students in developmental reading literacy programs process text differently than traditionally admitted students? Presented at the Society of Computers in Psychology, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Griffin, T. D., Wiley, J., & Thiede, K. (2013). Test expectancy effects on metacomprehension, self-regulation, and learning. In M. Knauff, M. Pauen, N. Sebanz, & I. Wachsmuth (Eds.), Cooperative Minds: Social Interaction and Group Dynamics: Proceedings of the 35th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 3953). Austin, TX: Cognitive Science Society, Inc.
Shanahan, C. (2013). Research in multiple texts and text support. In J. Ippolito, J. Lawrence, & C. Zeller (Eds.), Adolescent Literacy in the Era of the Common Core: From Research into Practice (pp.143-162). Boston: Harvard Ed Review Press.
Voss, J. F. & Wiley, J. (2013). From decoding to documents: The acquisition and interaction of comprehension skills. In M. A. Britt, S. R. Goldman, & J. F. Rouet (Eds.), Reading: From words to multiple texts (pp. 200 – 205). New York, NY: Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group.
Goldman, S. R., Lawless, K. A., Pellegrino, J. W., Braasch, J. L. G., Manning, F. H., & Gomez, K. (2012). A technology for assessing multiple source comprehension: an essential skill of the 21st Century. In M. Mayrath, J. Clarke-Midura, & D. H. Robinson (Eds.). Technology-Based Assessments for 21st Century Skills: Theoretical and Practical Implications from Modern Research, (pp. 171-207). Charlotte, NC: Information Age Publishing.
Lee, C. D. (2011). Education and the study of literature. Scientific Study of Literature, 1(1), 49-58. doi:10.1075/5501.1.1.051ee
Under Revision
Greenleaf, C., & Brown, W. (under revision). Tapping teacher’s knowledge to support text-dependent argumentation as a way of learning in science.
Holt, J., Magliano, J. P. & Durik. (under revision). Exploring the dynamic nature of inference generation during mental model construction
Submitted for Journal review
Levine, S. Sentence stems as supports for students’ interpretive thinking and writing. Research in the Teaching of English. Manuscript submitted for publication.
Litman, C., Marple, S., & Greenleaf, C. (submitted for journal review). The enduring impact of design based professional development on literacy instruction in secondary subject areas.
Yukhymenko, M., Lawless, K., Goldman, S. R., Shanahan, C., & Pellegrino, J. (Under Review). Measuring multiple source comprehension with a rating task: a signal detection theory approach. Manuscript submitted for publication.