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Han, Jisu; Neuharth-Pritchett, Stacey – Early Child Development and Care, 2019
This study examined the effects of receiving multiple intervention services on the language, literacy, and general development of preschool children from low-income families. By employing a hierarchical linear model on a sample of 1436 children, developmental outcomes of four-year-old children receiving varying numbers of intervention services…
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Emergent Literacy, Beginning Reading, Preschool Children

Hill, Mary W. – Language Arts, 1982
Recounts an incident illustrating a child's development of communication skills and offers suggestions for parents to help facilitate that development. (HTH)
Descriptors: Child Development, Communication Skills, Language Acquisition, Parent Role

Green, Connie R. – Childhood Education, 1998
Notes that names are the first words most children write and that learning to write their name can be highly motivating for preschoolers. Addresses: why preschool children should be encouraged to write their names; organizing and facilitating the sign-in process at school; how children develop their ability to write their names; and the benefits…
Descriptors: Handwriting, Language Acquisition, Letters (Alphabet), Preschool Education
Payton, Shirley – 1984
This book concerns the growth of a single child, as reported by her mother, from her first encounters with books and print to the beginnings of independent reading and writing. The study took place mainly between the child's third and fourth birthdays, during which period weekly tape recordings were made of story-reading sessions with one or both…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Early Reading, Language Acquisition, Literacy

Newkirk, Thomas – Language Arts, 1985
Argues that James Moffett's influential model of a young writer's development is flawed, because it depicts beginning writers as being far more limited than they are. (HTH)
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Educational Theories, Elementary Education, Language Acquisition

Hubbard, Ruth – Language Arts, 1985
Explores the patterns in children's talk about their writing, by means of transcribed conversations during daily writing/sharing sessions in a first grade classroom. Discusses the importance of this kind of talk. (HTH)
Descriptors: Child Language, Grade 1, Language Acquisition, Language Arts

Cambourne, Brian – English in Australia, 1983
Relates some of the observations made of a kindergarten classroom over a two-year period in which teachers simulated as many conditions as possible with respect to a natural "learning-how-to-write" situation. (HOD)
Descriptors: Child Language, Classroom Observation Techniques, Elementary Education, Kindergarten

Ruth, Leo – Reading Teacher, 1987
Notes that because reading and writing are separate but complementary aspects of a single language system, the way teachers plan activities determines the way in which children's writing helps them develop insights into their reading. (FL)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Language Acquisition, Learning Activities, Reading Comprehension
Moss, Kay – 1982
To determine the designs, procedures, and findings of studies related to an investigation of the developmental aspects of the writing processes of children, a literature search was made of documents indexed in "Current Index to Journals in Education" (CIJE) and "Resources in Education" (RIE). A search was also made of the literature in…
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Elementary Education, Language Acquisition, Literature Reviews

Hall, Nigel – Reading, 1985
Explores how children become oriented to literacy and how their perceptions of the purpose of print develop as they move toward becoming more fluent users of print. (DF)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Early Experience, Early Reading, Language Acquisition

Jacobs, Suzanne E. – Written Communication, 1985
Presents a model that predicts writing growth in children as a logical outcome of language acquisition. Provides a list of the kinds of language learning underway in the elementary school years and suggests that teachers may use this list to anticipate where and how such learning will influence the writing processes of children. (FL)
Descriptors: Attention Span, Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Skills

Dyson, Anne Haas – Research in the Teaching of English, 1983
Examines kindergarten children's use of talk during writing to draw inferences regarding how children use speech to make sense of written language. (HOD)
Descriptors: Classroom Observation Techniques, Kindergarten Children, Language Acquisition, Oral Language
Eckhoff, Barbara L. – 1986
A study investigated how children's writing reflects the syntactic complexity, style, and format of their basal readers. Subjects were 116 students drawn from 10 second, third, and fourth grade classrooms in two different schools located near Boston, Massachusetts. A matched group design was used, and students using a form of the "Ginn"…
Descriptors: Basal Reading, Child Language, Elementary Education, Language Acquisition

Newkirk, Thomas – Language Arts, 1984
Disproves two assumptions about the development of written language by examining the spontaneous writing of a young child. Expounded primarily by James Britton and associates, the assumptions are (1) children's early writing is relatively undifferentiated in function, and (2) the primary starting point for young writers is writing stories. (HTH)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Child Language, Developmental Stages, Language Acquisition

Christie, Frances – English in Australia, 1983
Argues that the process of learning to write should be recognized as a process of learning how to construct different kinds of written texts, each representing a different way of making meaning. (HOD)
Descriptors: Child Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Language Acquisition, Learning Processes