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Showing 61 to 75 of 160 results Save | Export
Coltharp, Lurline H. – 1976
An effort must be made in the field of phonetics to attract and retain the best students. With this goal in mind, teachers of phonetics must plan their programs with great care. Proper sequencing of the initial presentation in the teaching of transcription is essential. The most important consideration is that the student should be able to grasp…
Descriptors: College Students, Curriculum Development, Higher Education, Phonemes
Botel, Morton; Seaver, JoAnn T. – 1984
In the context of whole language learning, the teaching of phonics can be approached in two different ways. In one situation, the teacher engages children in composing with a purpose and for an audience, during which time the children become aware of graphophonic relationships through their need to spell words. In the other situation, the teacher…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Elementary Education, Integrated Activities, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
Calhoun, Mary Lynne; Allegretti, Christine L. – 1984
To test F. J. Morrison's conceptualization of reading disability as the failure to master the complex irregular system of rules governing sound-symbol correspondence in English (1980), a study investigated the speed with which disabled and normal readers processed short vowels, long vowels, and vowel digraphs. Subjects consisted of two groups of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Language Processing, Males
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
Hollenbeck, Albert R.; Slaby, Ronald G. – 1975
The acquisition of imitative responses without reinforcement was investigated with infants by eliminating contingent reinforcement through the use of videotaped models. Twenty-nine male and female infants were randomly assigned to one of two groups, a Rhythmic Vocalization Group or a Conversation Control Group. Infants in the first group were…
Descriptors: Females, Imitation, Infant Behavior, Infants
La Sorte, Diane M. – 1980
A study was conducted to investigate the ability of children to determine meanings of derived words that have undergone a pronunciation shift while retaining a close orthographic relationship to their base words. A researcher-designed test was constructed using derived words that had their base word included in a "core list" of words at or below…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, Language Patterns, Learning Modalities
Coberly, Mary Schramm – 1977
Patterns which partly resemble the proposed "fronting,""voicing," and "stopping" tendencies exist to a statistically significant degree in David Olmsted's large sample of child speech. Instead of the "voicing" pattern that has been suggested, however, voiced stops seem to be favored word-initially, but voiced fricatives are favored word-finally.…
Descriptors: Child Language, Descriptive Linguistics, Distinctive Features (Language), English
Oshika, Beatrice T. – 1976
This paper describes a large computer-coded conversational speech data base and results of testing phonological rules on that data base. The study shows that frequency of rule application depends not only on phonological environments, but also on frequency of occurrence of specific words. That is, some rules are highly word-dependent, others are…
Descriptors: Acoustic Phonetics, Computational Linguistics, Connected Discourse, Descriptive Linguistics
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Leong, C. K. – 1976
This paper discusses some psycholinguistic and psychological bases of learning to read in two apparently disparate writing systems, English and Chinese. As an alphabet, English orthography has "more reason than rhyme"; relational units and markers (e.g., "hens" and "hence") are important. The combinatory properties of…
Descriptors: Alphabets, Beginning Reading, Chinese, English
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Kjaersgaard, Poul Soren, Ed. – Odense Working Papers in Language and Communication, 2002
Papers from the conference in this volume include the following: "Towards Corpus Annotation Standards--The MATE Workbench" (Laila Dybkjaer and Niels Ole Bernsen); "Danish Text-to-Speech Synthesis Based on Stored Acoustic Segments" (Charles Hoequist); "Toward a Method for the Automated Design of Semantic…
Descriptors: Age, Computational Linguistics, Danish, Databases
Minus, Molly E. – 1992
A study examined the relation between phonemic awareness and reading across the full range of decoding abilities in adults; determined if phonemic awareness can be taught to low-literate adults in one 45-minute session; and determined the effect of phonemic awareness training on the acquisition of decoding skills by low-literate and illiterate…
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Adult Literacy, Decoding (Reading), Instructional Effectiveness
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
Mahony, Diana L.; Mann, Virginia A. – 1991
This study uses linguistic humor to show that awareness of only those linguistic units transcribed by the orthography bear a special relation to early reading success. The study is decribed following a review of the literature and a discussion of advantages and problems associated with the use of humor appreciation as a probe of children's…
Descriptors: Early Reading, Elementary School Students, Grade 2, Humor
McCusker, Leo X.; And Others – 1977
Two experiments examined proofreading errors to test whether reading is mediated by a phonological recoding stage. In the first experiment, 162 undergraduates circled the misspelled words in a text as the experimenter read the passage aloud. In the second experiment, 165 undergraduates corrected misspellings as they read the same passage silently,…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Higher Education, Miscue Analysis, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
Underwood, Geoffrey – 1981
Two experiments were conducted to determine the features of text to which skilled adult readers need to attend while reading and the features that either are of minimal importance or can be processed automatically without directed processing. In the first experiment, 12 college students attended to a timed picture naming task, in which a picture…
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Attention, Cognitive Processes, College Students
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