NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 6 results Save | Export
Nelson, Laurie – 1989
A study explored the possibility of instructional influence on children's passage along a developmental spelling continuum. The spelling of a group of 28 children who received intensive phonics instruction their kindergarten year was contrasted with the spelling of 24 first-grade children instructed in word-based materials. Subjects were initially…
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Grade 1, Kindergarten Children, Phonics
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
Betts, Emmett Albert – 1976
This discussion on spelling and phonics focuses on beginning reading vocabulary (phonology and graphemics of high utility words), factors in word perception (their recognition in teaching word perception skills), premises and principles of phonics (their relation to curriculum content and to methods), phonic rules or spelling patterns (their…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Language Acquisition, Language Skills, Phonics
PDF pending restoration PDF pending restoration
Durrell, Donald D. – 1976
This paper details the development of two commercial programs for the instruction of language skills. The first, a reading program for the first two months of first grade, is designed to move children from speaking to reading without experiencing failure. In teaching prereading phonics skills (letter recognition, letter writing, awareness of…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Early Childhood Education, Instructional Programs, Intermediate Grades
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
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