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Groff, Patrick J. – Reading Teacher, 1984
Reports that after more than 50 years of argument as to whether children should be taught the names of letters as part of learning to read, American researchers have begun to suggest that letter name instruction and phonics instruction interact for better learning. (FL)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Learning Strategies, Learning Theories, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
McCulloch, Myrna T. – 2000
A "national cry" has gone out that phonics and phonemics awareness must again be taught. True literacy involves much more than merely reading. Students need to be equipped to think, write, spell, and express themselves orally and on paper. This helps them to clarify their own thinking. The English alphabet is a sound/symbol system, not a…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Decoding (Reading), English Instruction, Instructional Effectiveness
Ediger, Marlow – 1999
This paper considers the Initial Teaching Alphabet (ITA), long out of use in the United States. It was developed by Sir James Pittman in England in 1959 as a plan of reading instruction with a simplified phoneme-grapheme correspondence that stressed consistency between symbol and sound. The paper lists the advantages and disadvantages of the ITA…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Graduate Students, Initial Teaching Alphabet, Instructional Effectiveness
Leisy, Estelle Mendoza – 1989
Very young Spanish-English bilingual children may not perceive sound-clue illustrations presented in the classroom as they are intended to be perceived. For example, when a child is told, "A is for apple," he may also interpret the message as "A is for manzana," confusing the intended message. While the teacher may hear English only, the child's…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, English (Second Language), Interference (Language), Kindergarten