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Rohner, Traugott – 1989
This booklet presents a simplified and improved method of writing or spelling English, which simply uses the standard 26-letter alphabet to spell words the way they are pronounced. The booklet criticizes the conventional English spelling system as unnecessarily difficult, inconsistent, and illogical and suggests that easy-to-learn "Basic…
Descriptors: English, Letters (Alphabet), Phonics, Spelling

Taylor, D. S. – English Language Teaching Journal, 1981
Presents case that English is not as unsystematic as it appears nor is it a severe obstacle to learning for both native and nonnative speakers by describing the ideographic, syllabic, and alphabetic writing systems. Suggests teachers need a greater awareness of the nature of the English writing system and how to teach it. (BK)
Descriptors: English, Phonemic Alphabets, Phonics, Second Language Instruction
Glazer, Susan Mandel – Teaching Pre K-8, 2005
It's been heard, again and again, that phonics is the basis for learning to read. The philosophical pendulum swings from one point of view to another. One school of thought attests that readers must learn phonics in order to learn to read; another insists that whole words need to be learned first. This author contends that neither is correct--nor…
Descriptors: Phonics, Emergent Literacy, Reading Strategies, Teaching Methods
McCabe, Don – 1994
Arguing that following some simple concepts can drastically reduce the rate of illiteracy, this booklet maintains that the extent of the literacy problem is teacher-induced and can be reversed by the systematic teaching of the phonics of the English language. The booklet argues that students in grades 1-3 are just beginning to learn how to read…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, English, Illiteracy, Phonics
Albert, Elaine – 1994
Phonics teaches learners how to match the letters of the alphabet to the speech sounds they already know. At age five, children who are ready to learn to read have a vocabulary of some 5,000 words and understand far more than that when they hear them. The problem is that there are 44 sounds in English and only 26 letters in the alphabet. Phonics…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Emergent Literacy, English, Initial Teaching Alphabet
Williamson, Leon; Wooden, Sharon L. – 1980
The premise of this paper is that English orthography has formed a system that represents more than phonetic values, but also represents semantic, etymological, and preferential values. The paper notes that English is a fairly regular and complex system in which both sound and meaning share leading roles in determining spelling. Studies are…
Descriptors: Adults, Elementary Secondary Education, English, Etymology