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Timothy Shanahan – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2025
Research shows little benefit from phonics instruction in Grades 2 through 12. However, more recent studies show that students who fall below a decoding threshold fail to benefit from other kinds of reading instruction. This exploration of the evidence suggests that these students are likely to need support in the reading and spelling of…
Descriptors: Literacy Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Phonics, Reading Instruction
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Colette Ankers de Salis; Gina Gretton; Christine Smith – Teacher Education Advancement Network Journal, 2024
This paper explores the extent to which student teachers, in their final year of a 3-year undergraduate programme teach phonics as part of a holistic reading programme linked to reading for meaning and for pleasure. It reports the results of surveys, lesson observations and interviews with a sample of students studying at one university in the…
Descriptors: Student Teachers, Undergraduate Students, Phonics, Foreign Countries
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Holly B. Lane; Valentina A. Contesse; Nicholas A. Gage; Matthew K. Burns – Reading Research Quarterly, 2025
Research has demonstrated the positive effects of systematically teaching phonemic awareness and phonics in kindergarten and first grade, but many commonly used reading curricula do not adequately incorporate these foundational skills. In this study, we examined the efficacy of an instructional program ("UFLI Foundations") in…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Reading Skills, Phonemic Awareness, Phonics
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Cassandra Potier Watkins; Stanislas Dehaene – Journal of Experimental Education, 2024
We report the effectiveness of using the tablet-game Kalulu Phonics immediately after intervention in kindergarten and on national evaluations the year after. In a previous intervention testing the software with 1st graders, fluency and comprehension were boosted, but only when used in concert with reading instruction at the start of the year.…
Descriptors: Tablet Computers, Handheld Devices, Educational Games, Kindergarten
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Christina Novelli; Scott P. Ardoin; Derek B. Rodgers – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2024
Substantial evidence exists suggesting that access to articulatory gestures during instruction improves students' phonological awareness skills, but researchers have yet to explore the role of articulatory gestures in initial phonics instruction. The purpose of this study was to examine if visual access to articulatory gestures (i.e., mouth cues)…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Phonics, Cues, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
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Katharine Pace Miles; Denise Eide; Janee' R. Butler – Reading Psychology, 2024
High frequency words, commonly referred to as sight words, are often a focus of emergent reading instruction. Instructional practices abound that require emergent readers to memorize the spelling and pronunciation of the words without drawing attention to grapheme-phoneme correspondences (GPCs) in the words. These approaches ignore a critical…
Descriptors: Sight Vocabulary, Sight Method, Word Lists, Knowledge Base for Teaching
Seth A. Parsons; Joy Dangora Erickson – Phi Delta Kappan, 2024
Recently, the science of reading has garnered much attention in elementary schools across the U.S. The science of reading is a body of research on learning to read that has been accumulated through systematic inquiry. Seth A. Parsons and Joy Dangora Erickson argue that the way the science of reading is being implemented is missing a key…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Phonemic Awareness, Phonics, Reading Fluency
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Dominic Wyse; Charlotte Hacking – Literacy, 2024
This paper presents a new theory and model of the teaching of decoding, reading and writing. The first part of the paper reviews a selection of influential models of learning to read and write that to varying degrees have been used as the basis for approaches to teaching, including the "Simple View of Reading." As well as noting some…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Reading Instruction, Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Doak, Lauran – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2024
Children and young people with learning disabilities may not acquire the independent reading and writing skills which are conflated with 'literacy' in international educational policy, calling into question what 'literacy' means in the context of 'special education'. Existing literature explores teacher perspectives, but less is known about parent…
Descriptors: Phonics, Learning Disabilities, Mothers, Parent Attitudes
Hugh W. Catts; Alan G. Kamhi – American Educator, 2025
Grassroots efforts and other advocacy have led to the vast majority of states adopting policies designed to improve the reading outcomes of all children, including those who struggle to read. Whereas these policies consider various aspects of reading, much of their emphasis has been on developing word reading accuracy and fluency through explicit…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Educational Policy, Advocacy, Activism
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Amber Lawson – Reading Research Quarterly, 2024
Young children of Color from minoritized communities can co-author decodable stories using phonics skills they have been taught, their lived experiences, and home languages, including nondominant English languages, to develop decoding skills using student-generated decodable readers. While traditional and curricular decodable readers are used…
Descriptors: Phonics, Reading Instruction, Decoding (Reading), Urban Schools
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Young-Suk Grace Kim; Jonathan Stern; Nompumelelo Mohohlwane; Stephen Taylor – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2025
Longitudinal data from the Early Grade Reading Study (EGRS I) in South Africa (N = 4538) were used to examine the role of instructional contexts in the relations of literacy skills between children's home language (L1 Setswana) and a second language (L2 English). All children received literacy instruction in Setswana in Grades 1 to 3. However,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, African Languages, Elementary School Students, Native Language Instruction
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Amber Lawson – Reading Teacher, 2024
When young children of Color from minoritized communities read decodable readers mandated by their school districts, children approach reading the texts with the expectation that the texts will make sense. While decodable readers allow children to apply their knowledge of phonics skills in context to support their word recognition, they tend to…
Descriptors: Minority Group Students, Reading Instruction, Decoding (Reading), Reading Comprehension
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Teaira McMurtry – English in Education, 2024
This paper explores how Black Women K-12 Teachers (BWTs) engage with Black Language, challenging prevailing narratives. Despite limited recognition, BWTs advocate for the authenticity of Black Language. The research centres on the 16-week Black Language Learning Series (BLLS), delving into the roots, rules, and ramifications of Black Language.…
Descriptors: African American Teachers, Females, Women Faculty, Elementary Secondary Education
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Majed Abdullah Alharbi; Arif Ahmed Mohammed Hassan Al-Ahdal – Interactive Learning Environments, 2024
This study has been conducted with eighty undergraduate EFL students at Qassim University, over a period of six weeks, with forty students each in control and experimental groups. The results from the mixed-method analysis show that the experimental group achieved higher scores in listening skills and general comprehension than the control group.…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Listening Skills
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