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Showing 46 to 57 of 57 results Save | Export
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Moats, Louisa C. – Educational Leadership, 2001
Researchers agree that a core linguistic deficit underlies poor reading at all ages; poor readers generally exhibit weaknesses in phonological processing and word-recognition speed and accuracy. Reading intervention grounded in research imparts to older readers the skills missed in primary grades and can bring them to grade level in 1 or 2 years.…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, Intervention, Phonemics
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Hodgin, June; Wooliscroft, Caaren – Educational Leadership, 1997
Basing their classroom instruction on the Dunn Learning Styles Model, two third-grade teachers modified certain classroom-design features, including noise, light, temperature, spatial design, sociological stimuli, perception centers, mobility, and intake. Accommodating students' reading styles has yielded superior results on the Texas Assessment…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Cognitive Style, Elementary Education, Grade 3
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Vacca, Richard T. – Educational Leadership, 2002
Describes the use of content reading and writing programs to address the problems of adolescent literacy. Provides examples of how content-area teachers incorporate reading and writing instruction strategies in their classes. (PKP)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Content Area Reading, Content Area Writing, Educational Policy
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Fielding, Linda G.; Pearson, P. David – Educational Leadership, 1994
A successful reading instruction program requires ample time for actual text reading; teacher-directed comprehension strategy instruction; opportunities for peer and collaborative learning; and time for discussing what has been read. To develop independent, motivated, lifelong readers, a substantial part of children's reading instructional time…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Elementary Education, Lifelong Learning
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Harris, Karen R.; Graham, Steve – Educational Leadership, 1996
Abolishing direct-instruction and skill-practice opportunities could have serious consequences for special-needs learners. Teachers should provide explicit and focused, even isolated instruction as needed and integrate it into the larger literacy context. This means conducting ongoing assessments of each student's abilities, skills, and progress…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Drills (Practice), Elementary Education, Learning Problems
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Clarke, Bill – Educational Leadership, 2006
With 70 percent of its student body entering school reading below grade level, Blackstone Academy Charter School realized that teachers needed to make literacy a pillar of the school's culture. This 9-12 urban high school administers a reading evaluation developed by the Northwest Evaluation Association each fall and spring to all incoming…
Descriptors: Literacy, School Culture, Reading Difficulties, High School Students
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Krashen, Stephen – Educational Leadership, 1998
Providing rich supply of high-interest story books is more feasible policy for literacy education than urgent exhortations to improve teacher quality. Free reading profoundly improves students' reading and writing ability, spelling, grammar, and vocabulary. The quality of a country s or state's school libraries significantly predicts its reading…
Descriptors: Access to Information, Books, Educational Equity (Finance), Elementary Education
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Rosenshine, Barak; Meister, Carla – Educational Leadership, 1992
Although scaffolds (forms of support to help students bridge the gap between their current abilities and intended goals) can be applied to teaching all skills, they are almost indispensable for teaching higher-level cognitive strategies. Especially helpful scaffolds for clarifying thoughts, summarizing, and solving mathematical problems are…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Secondary Education, Feedback, Higher Education
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Fitzgerald, Jill; Graves, Michael F. – Educational Leadership, 2005
Scaffolded reading experiences provide a practical, research-based framework that teachers can use to support their English language learners. The Scaffolded Reading Experience framework consists of a set of Prue-, during-, and postreading activities to use with any genre of texts. Prereading strategies include building background knowledge,…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Reading Strategies
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Goldberg, Shari M.; Pesko, Ellen – Educational Leadership, 2000
Teachers require new ways of teaching, including readers' workshops, literature circles, and book clubs to promote critical thinking and positive attitudes toward reading. When teachers gather to discuss nonprofessional literature, they tap into their love of reading while enhancing their understanding of students' needs. (MLH)
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Discussion, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Elementary Secondary Education
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Tatum, Alfred W. – Educational Leadership, 2006
By selecting appropriate reading materials, teachers can engage African American adolescent males with text, particularly students who have not mastered the skills, strategies, and knowledge that will lead to positive life outcomes. This approach takes into account students' four literacy needs--academic, cultural, emotional, and social--and…
Descriptors: African Americans, Males, Reading Materials, Adolescents
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Dicks, Matthew J. – Educational Leadership, 2005
Because today's students have grown up steeped in video games and the Internet, most of them expect feedback, and usually gratification, very soon after they expend effort on a task. Teachers can get quick feedback to students by showing them videotapes of their learning performances. The author, a 3rd grade teacher describes how the seemingly…
Descriptors: Feedback, Videotape Recordings, Student Evaluation, Teacher Effectiveness
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