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Calhoun, Mary Lynne – Education and Training of the Mentally Retarded, 1985
Seven junior high age TMR students were instructed to recognize sight vocabulary words using handwriting or typing activities. Typing speed increased at an accelerated rate and accuracy in copying words by typing was consistently superior to copying by handwriting: typing activities were as effective as handwriting activities in promoting sight…
Descriptors: Handwriting, Junior High Schools, Language Arts, Moderate Mental Retardation

Lally, M. – American Journal of Mental Deficiency, 1981
Eight children were taught associations between the written and spoken versions of words by a "talking" computer. These children increased their sight vocabularies by an average of 128 percent; a comparison group had a 34 percent increase. (Author)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Elementary Secondary Education, Exceptional Child Research, Mild Mental Retardation

Gast, David L.; And Others – Exceptionality, 1990
Primary-aged students (N=5) with moderate mental retardation were taught to read environmental sight words and assessed for observational cross-learning of other students' words. Results indicate that the constant time delay method was effective in teaching sight words to four students and all students acquired some information targeted for other…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Incidental Learning, Mental Retardation, Observational Learning

Leibert, Robert E. – Reading Horizons, 1991
Focuses on the examination of pupil responses for grades two through four in a study that provides more recent information about the performance of pupils on the Dolch Test. Provides some observations to assist teachers in interpreting the result of pupil responses to these words. (MG)
Descriptors: Basic Vocabulary, Elementary Education, Reading Research, Sight Vocabulary

Hall, Dorothy P.; Cunningham, Patricia M. – Reading Improvement, 1988
Reports a study of readers' use of context and letter sound as polysyllabic decoding strategies, and a study of the effect of intervention strategies on subjects who do not effectively use context. Concludes that intervention strategies do not improve the performances of students who are not good users of context. (RS)
Descriptors: Context Clues, Decoding (Reading), Intermediate Grades, Reading Research

Stuart, Morag; Masterson, Jackie; Dixon, Maureen – Journal of Research in Reading, 2000
Investigates the relation between phonological awareness, sound-to-letter mapping knowledge, and printed word learning in novice five-year-old readers. Explores effects of visual memory and of teaching methods. Finds mental representations of printed words are more easily formed by beginners who are able to match at least some of the phonological…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Memory, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Primary Education

Barbetta, Patricia M.; And Others – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1994
This study compared immediate (after each error) and delayed (at the end of each session) error correction during sight-word instruction with 4 students (ages 7-9) with developmental disabilities. Immediate error correction was superior on each of four dependent variables. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Developmental Disabilities, Error Correction, Feedback
Wile, Tammy L.; Borowsky, Ron – Brain and Language, 2004
The present research investigated the relationship between Rapid Automatized Naming (RAN) performance, letter-string reading measures of sight vocabulary (SV) and phonetic decoding (PD), and lexical decision. Criterion-based naming rates were obtained from three types of RAN tasks: digits, letters, and letter sounds. Latency measures were obtained…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Measures (Individuals), Comparative Analysis, Word Recognition
Simons, Herbert D. – 1992
This study sought to add to the evidence on predictable texts by asking two questions: (1) What type of reading do predictable texts produce? and (2) How do predictable texts influence sight vocabulary acquisition and decoding? Subjects, six black male students selected from a first-grade classroom in an urban setting, had minimal or no sight…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Elementary School Students, Grade 1, Primary Education
Bryant, N. Dale; Gettinger, Maribeth – 1980
Thirty learning disabled and thirty nondisabled children (mean age 10 years) were compared on a paired associate learning task that simulated the process of sight word learning. Two instructional variables (response competition and stimulus complexity) that have been hypothesized as contributing to overloading in learning disabled children, were…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Learning Disabilities, Learning Processes, Paired Associate Learning
Bryant, N. Dale; And Others – 1980
To investigate the possibility that learning disabled children can be taught effectively with a developmental reading program designed for normal learners through careful modification of the teaching procedure, a set of sight word instructional materials was developed that incorporated five learning principles within a mastery learning model:…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Instructional Materials, Junior High Schools, Learning Disabilities
Mayfield, Laureen Goers; Holmes, Julie A. – 1999
Twenty-seven third-grade children in a northern Louisiana public school participated in a study which examined whether a minimum amount of direct instruction in sight word recognition, combined with drill of sight words, could result in significantly better performance for the targeted at-risk children on the story and unit reading tests. The…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Grade 3, High Risk Students, Primary Education

Ceprano, Maria A. – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1981
Uses a naturalistic setting to explore the effects of word-recognition instruction by a context method and a word-alone method to find out if mode of assessment plays a part in determining efficiency of methods. (HOD)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Comparative Analysis, Context Clues, Kindergarten

Bryant, N. Dale; Gettinger, Maribeth – Journal of Educational Research, 1981
Differences between learning disabled and nonlearning disabled children's paired-associate learning can be eliminated by using instructional modifications. Procedures that reduce the "overloading" of the learning disabled students' cognitive processes have positive effects on associative learning. (CJ)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Conceptual Tempo, Elementary Education, Learning Disabilities

Belfiore, Phillip J.; And Others – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1996
The effects of color on the reading recognition and comprehension of 3 students (ages 10 to 11) with learning disabilities and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder were assessed in 2 studies using a single-subject design. Color did not enhance sight-word learning; however, for longer reading comprehension tasks, color had an immediate positive…
Descriptors: Attention Deficit Disorders, Color, Hyperactivity, Learning Disabilities