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Perfetti, Charles A.; Beck, Isabel – 1982
There are at least two kinds of phonetic knowledge: phoneme synthesis and analytic knowledge. In phoneme synthesis a person demonstrates phonetic knowledge by being able to assemble segments into larger units. With analytic knowledge one knows that syllables or words are analyzable into constituent segments. One type of knowledge enables learning…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Early Reading, Elementary Education, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
Fry, Edward – 1984
Spectographic analysis of speech calls into question two common assumptions of reading teachers: (1) that words are independent units of speech, and (2) that phonemes, the minimal speech sounds needed to change meaning, actually exist. Spectographs reproduce the physical sounds made in speech without any human or psychological interpretation. When…
Descriptors: Oral Language, Phonemes, Reading Instruction, Sound Spectrographs
Nathan, Geoffrey S. – 1982
The natural phonology theory, related to European structuralism, makes two fundamental assumptions: (1) phonemes are mental images of the sounds of language, and (2) phonological processes represent subconscious mental substitutions of one sound or class of sounds for another that are the natural response to the relative difficulties of sound…
Descriptors: Interference (Language), Interlanguage, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Geissal, Mary Ann; Knafle, June D. – 1979
The irregularity of English spelling rules, dialect differences, and an inability to identify sound segments within a single syllable are three important reasons teachers and students have difficulty teaching and learning reading using phonics. Within the same language, phonics rules may need to be adapted to fit the dialect of the student or of…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Decoding (Reading), Dialects, Elementary Education
Shen, Di – 1991
The traditional theory of Chinese writing is that it is divorced from the language because as a non-alphabetic system, it cannot represent real speech. Chinese writing, however, is a functional linguistic system in its own right. Writing does not need to be totally dependent on speech, but can be related either to the phonological or the semantic…
Descriptors: Chinese, Cultural Context, Ethnocentrism, Foreign Countries
Frith, Uta – 1981
Cognitive psychology has provided an information processing model that distinguishes between input processes such as listening to speech or reading and output processes such as speaking or writing. It is useful for spelling reformers to consider reading (input) and writing (output) processes separately, because the demands of the reader and of the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Technology, Elementary Secondary Education, Epistemology
Murray, Bruce – 1994
A survey of the training literature on phoneme awareness suggests that help for slower readers comes in the form of a focus on phonemes through stretched sounding and phoneme isolation in a careful progression that considers the number and choice of phonemes and position in syllables. Stretching and isolating phonemes allows beginners to explore…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Higher Education, Models, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
Wrighton, Charlene A. – 1995
It is upon a positive literature-based foundation that educators must build excellent curriculum and teaching strategies. It is the job of educators to be trained to integrate the concepts of whole language and direct phonetic instruction so children have the advantage of both schools of thought, to be aware of how children learn most efficiently,…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Curriculum Problems, Early Childhood Education, Language Arts
Schenkat, Randy – 1980
This paper offers seven practical suggestions to teachers who are teaching phonics to hard-to-teach children (the learning disabled, the educable mentally retarded, slow learners, and the culturally disadvantaged) and who are not experiencing the success they desire. The suggestions are made under the following topics: (1) cumulative learning and…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Change Strategies, Classroom Techniques, Elementary Education
Jones, Monica L. – 1996
There are compelling reasons for integrating phonics into the adult English-as-a-Second-Language (ESL) curriculum. The adult ESL student has the analytical capability to understand phoneme-grapheme relationships and can be taught to use any transferable native-language literacy skills in English spelling. In this essay, the potential of phonics…
Descriptors: Adult Education, English (Second Language), Instructional Effectiveness, Language Research