NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 5 results Save | Export
Assink, Egbert; Kattenberg, Goran – 1991
A study investigated the question of whether normal and poor readers differ in the way they process sublexical structures in printed words. In a reading level design experiment, two matched groups of normal and poor readers (11 subjects of mean age 9.4 years and 11 subjects of mean age 12.6 years) were compared with regard to their use of…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries, Reading Ability, Reading Difficulties
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Reitsma, Pytter – Journal of Research in Reading, 1983
Shows that Dutch children acquire and use lexical entries containing specific information about visual-orthographic structure quite early, even after only six months of formal training in reading. (FL)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Foreign Countries, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Primary Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
van Daal, Victor H. P.; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1994
Examined whether children with reading problems could be taught to use multiletter patterns in word decoding. Testing used practiced words and similar and dissimilar nonpracticed words. Found that all types of practice were beneficial for the recognition of practiced words transfer to the reading of novel words appeared only when graphemic and…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Elementary School Students, Foreign Countries, Reading Difficulties
de Glopper, Kees; And Others – 1996
A study investigated the effect of training Dutch students to learn to derive word meanings from written context. Subjects, 64 grade 6 primary school children, were randomly divided into control and experimental groups. The experimental group followed eight lessons in their mothertongue (Dutch), while the control group followed their regular…
Descriptors: Context Clues, Decoding (Reading), Foreign Countries, Grade 6
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Aarnoutse, Cor; Tomesen, Marieke – Educational Studies, 1998
Studies effects of an instructional program for deriving word meanings from context and through morphological analysis for primary school students with poor-to-average reading comprehension. Shows that it has a significant effect on the ability of students to derive word meanings, but found little evidence of transfer to general reading…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries, Learning Strategies