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Kim, Ji Young; Fienup, Daniel M.; Draus, Cassandra J.; Wong, Kristina K. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2023
We compared the effects of different "mastery" criteria and doses on the acquisition and maintenance of sight words for 4 second graders with and without disabilities. First, we replicated Set Analysis and Operant Analysis conditions where participants were taught sight words in 20-trial (4 operants, 5 opportunities) sessions.…
Descriptors: Sight Vocabulary, Elementary School Students, Grade 2, Students with Disabilities
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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
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Cazzell, Samantha; Skinner, Christopher H.; Taylor, Kala; McCurdy, Merilee; Ciancio, Dennis; Cihak, David; Skinner, Amy; Moore, Tara – Journal of Behavioral Education, 2020
Adapted alternating treatment designs were used to evaluate and compare the effectiveness of two computer-based sight-word-reading interventions among three elementary school students with an intellectual disability. Each intervention provided 30 stimulus--response--stimulus--response learning trials. One intervention included fixed 3-s response…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Sight Method, Sight Vocabulary, Reading Instruction
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Murray, Bruce A.; McIlwain, Mary Jane; Wang, Chih-hsuan; Murray, Geralyn; Finley, Stacie – Journal of Research in Reading, 2019
Learning irregular words involves mental marking of irregular letters in the spelling, a process not fully understood. In a within-subjects experiment, we manipulated the type of scaffolding given to beginning readers to evoke mental marking. We pretested to sort 103 kindergarten and first-grade participants into sequential decoders, who decode…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Elementary School Students, Grade 1, Emergent Literacy
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Clark, Margaret M. – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2017
Languages differ in the way that speech and meaning are represented in written form: in English, the correspondences are variable. Thus, in learning to read in English there is need for an approach that combines alphabetic decoding and a mastery of sight vocabulary. Teaching children to read should develop from an analysis of the skills and…
Descriptors: Literacy, Written Language, Speech Communication, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence