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Sherman, Richard H. – 1978
The commonly-used instructional sequence in which children read material silently and then read it orally is simply not effective. The arguments presented by E.A. Betts in 1957 for silent before oral reading can be countered point by point. Studies that have compared various reading conditions have had serious limitations and have failed to show…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Elementary Education, Literature Reviews, Oral Reading
Allen, Diane D. – 1988
A study examined oral and silent reading rates at various levels of difficulty to establish criterion rates for fluent reading at the fourth grade level. Subjects, 27 male and 45 female students from 6 classes in 3 public schools in central Oklahoma who read at an average of more than one year above grade placement, had their oral and silent…
Descriptors: Grade 4, Intermediate Grades, Oral Reading, Reading Fluency
Juel, Connie; Holmes, Betty – 1980
A sample of 48 second grade and fifth grade children, containing equal numbers of high and low ability readers, participated in a study that explored the degree to which oral and silent reading represented the same cognitive process for different age and ability level children. Their reading rates and comprehension scores for both oral and silent…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Elementary Education
McCutchen, Deborah; Dibble, Emily – 1990
A study investigated the role of phonemic (sound-based) information during silent reading to determine whether the visual tongue-twister effect occurs only when readers make judgments of sentence acceptability or whether the visual tongue-twister effect is due to the way sentences are represented in memory. Data were collected from 45 university…
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Cues, Distinctive Features (Language), Higher Education