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Raven, Jennifer N. – 1997
Most educators agree that an approach balanced between phonics and whole language is the best method of teaching beginning readers. Marie Carbo (1996) discusses the importance of focusing on a balanced approach to reading, because different students have different learning styles. Children who learn best with phonics instruction have analytic and…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Cognitive Style, Instructional Effectiveness, Language Skills
McCulloch, Myrna T. – 2000
A "national cry" has gone out that phonics and phonemics awareness must again be taught. True literacy involves much more than merely reading. Students need to be equipped to think, write, spell, and express themselves orally and on paper. This helps them to clarify their own thinking. The English alphabet is a sound/symbol system, not a…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Decoding (Reading), English Instruction, Instructional Effectiveness
Carbo, Marie; Cole, Robert W. – American School Board Journal, 1995
Although learning to read well is essential for future success, many children are neither proficient nor avid readers. There is no single "right" approach to reading instruction; teachers should abandon the phonics/whole-language debate and adapt strategies to children's preferred reading styles. Principals should model reading behavior…
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Cognitive Style, Modeling (Psychology), Phonics
Sudzina, Mary – 1993
A study investigated the relationship among reading style, instructional method, and reading achievement. Subjects were 213 second-grade students attending a large school in the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania area, with 84 students using a basal reader series with a phonics emphasis, 90 students using a basal reader series with a mixed emphasis, and…
Descriptors: Basal Reading, Cognitive Style, Elementary School Students, Grade 2