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Idol, Lorna; Rutledge, Margaret – Teaching Exceptional Children, 1993
This paper offers a rationale for integrating phonics with reading instruction for students with reading disabilities. It then suggests that direct teaching of sounds be provided by constructing "soundsheets" with rows of sound/letter combinations taken directly from the text the child will read after practicing the sounds. (JDD)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, Phonics

Dahl, Karin L.; Scharer, Patricia L.; Lawson, Lora L.; Grogan, Patricia R. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1999
Analyzes phonics teaching and learning in eight whole-language first-grade classrooms from October through May. Finds that foundation concepts (phonemic and phonological awareness, phonemic segmentation) and letter-sound relationships were taught and that teachers differentiated phonics instruction based on learned development and ongoing…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Beginning Reading, Decoding (Reading), Grade 1

Worthy, Jo; Hoffman, James V. – Reading Teacher, 1998
Offers responses from four readers of this journal, all reading and/or classroom teachers, to a question posed by another teacher: whether children who have had limited literacy experiences should start reading in whole-language readers and/or trade books or whether they should start in controlled-vocabulary preprimers. (SR)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Emergent Literacy, Instructional Effectiveness, Phonics

Murray, Bruce A. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
Forty-eight kindergarten children were assigned to phoneme identity, phoneme manipulation, or language experience programs. Children in the manipulation program made greater gains in blending and segmentation, but children in the phoneme identity condition made greater gains on a test of phonetic cue reading. Implications for reading instruction…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Identification, Kindergarten, Kindergarten Children

TEACHING Exceptional Children, 1996
This article briefly summarizes what is known about how phonological awareness fits into the beginning reading process and effective methods for teaching phonological awareness. Special difficulties with phonological awareness of children with learning disabilities or from culturally diverse backgrounds are noted. (DB)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Cultural Differences, Elementary Education, Learning Disabilities

Chapman, Marilyn L. – Canadian Journal of Research in Early Childhood Education, 1999
Calls for review of research on best practices in phonemic awareness training and direct-instruction reading programs. Suggests that a more effective approach to reading instruction is to integrate skills instruction with meaningful literacy experiences and to use writing to help children learn about written language, including phonemic awareness.…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Directed Reading Activity, Literacy Education, Phonemic Awareness

Post, Yolanda V.; Carreker, Suzanne; Holland, Ginger – Annals of Dyslexia, 2001
Two groups of first graders (n=63) participated in a 10-day intervention study in which they were instructed in the spelling of five final letter patterns in monosyllabic words. Children receiving phoneme instruction improved accuracy of final pattern spelling as well as speed of word reading over children receiving rime instruction. (Contains…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Elementary Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
What Works Clearinghouse, 2006
"DaisyQuest" is a software bundle that offers computer-assisted instruction in phonological awareness, targeting children aged three to seven years. The instructional activities, framed in a fairy tale involving a search for a friendly dragon named Daisy, teach children how to recognize words that rhyme; words that have the same…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Software, Computer Software Evaluation, Instructional Effectiveness
Roberts, Theresa A.; Meiring, Anne – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2006
First-grade children's reading, writing, and spelling competencies in 2 different instructional contexts for teaching phonics were examined. Reading, writing, and spelling abilities were measured at the beginning, middle, and end of 1st grade. Children were randomly assigned to 1 of 2 treatments designed to teach grapheme-phoneme correspondences,…
Descriptors: Phonics, Childrens Literature, Reading Comprehension, Spelling
Albert, Elaine – 1993
Some researchers believe that phonics is the more natural way to teach reading because, instead of requiring the learner to memorize whole words, phonics shows the learner the process by which alphabetic writing is converted into speech. The human baby babbles more than enough phonemes for any language. Before there was an alphabet, humans drew…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Brain, Early Childhood Education, Language Processing

Johnson, Kenneth R. – TESOL Quarterly, 1974
A study comparing Black dialect-speaking children and white children in grades 3-6 on their ability to hear final consonant stops showed the Blacks significantly less able to hear these sounds than the whites. The results indicate a need for special help in reading instruction. (CK)
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Beginning Reading, Black Dialects, Black Youth
Miller, J. Kenneth; Milligan, Jerry L. – 1989
A study examined whether children learn phonic decoding skills by reading without direct phonic instruction; compared the effects of a whole language first grade reading program with the effects of a traditional basal reading program; and determined whether there was a difference in decoding and comprehending abilities across levels of ability.…
Descriptors: Basal Reading, Beginning Reading, Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading)
Heffernan, Barbara K. – 1980
Results of the examination of teacher's manuals, grades one through four, that accompany a number of basal reading series used in schools in Staten Island, New York, indicated that although teacher's manuals included many phonic rules, none of the examined texts gave any utility or frequency data or cited any research studies to support the…
Descriptors: Basal Reading, Beginning Reading, Higher Education, Phonics
Goldwater-Rozensher, Susan; Hebard, Amy J. – 1978
A combination of case study observation and mini-experimentation techniques were used to examine a number of issues of relevance in the study of the acquisition of beginning reading skills. Six children were divided equally among three instructional modes: phonics, whole word, and mixed. They were asked to decode and encode words, and their…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, Phonics
Mathews, Mitford M. – 1976
The history of teaching people to read is explored from the introduction of the Greek alphabet about 3,000 years ago to the present renewed interest in sound symbol relationships. Greek schoolboys were required to learn first the alphabet in order, next commonly used syllables, and then words. English was first written in the Latin alphabet using…
Descriptors: Alphabets, Beginning Reading, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education