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Wallach, Michael A.; Wallach, Lise – 1976
The rationale, development, and implementation of a reading program designed to teach disadvantaged children the skills prerequisite to learning to read are discussed in this paper. Of particular importance are skills in the recognition and manipulation of basic speech sounds, phonemes. The first of the program's three parts takes two and one-half…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Conference Reports, Disadvantaged Youth, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hoffman, Paul R.; And Others – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1977
Ten children (mean age = 6 years, 7 months) who misarticulated /r/ participated in a task designed to survey inconsistent misarticulatory behavior, repeating 51 sentences during each of three trials. (Author/IM)
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Exceptional Child Research, Language Patterns, Phonemes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Bruck, Maggie; Treiman, Rebecca – Reading Research Quarterly, 1992
Examines the degree to which teaching beginning readers to use various types of analogies helps them pronounce new words and nonwords. Finds that, although beginning readers can use analogies, they rely to a large extent on correspondences between individual phonemes and graphemes to decode new words. (RS)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Decoding (Reading), Grade 1, Instructional Effectiveness
Stetson, Elton Grant – 1976
A sample of 270 first, second, and third graders participated in this study of the pronounceability of the 119 phonograms identified in the Glass Analysis for Perceptual Conditioning Program for poor decoders. Each subject was asked to pronounce each of the phonograms. Subjects were cross-classified by grade level, sex, and reading ability as…
Descriptors: Basic Reading, Beginning Reading, Decoding (Reading), Doctoral Dissertations
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Scarborough, Hollis S. – Child Development, 1990
At 30 months, children who were later considered dyslexic were deficient in length, sytactic complexity, and pronunciation of spoken language. At three years, children were deficit in receptive vocabulary and object-naming, and at five years, in phonemic awareness and letter-sound knowledge. These deficits were not found in normal reading children…
Descriptors: Early Reading, Longitudinal Studies, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Predictor Variables
Dorr, Roberta E. – 1999
A study investigated the degree to which the pronunciation of English words in the child's home environment affected the acquisition or discrimination of phonological and orthographic correspondences of standard written English. Subjects were low-socioeconomic-status, inner-city African American kindergarten, first-, and second-grade students, who…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Blacks, Class Activities, English