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Amoroso, Henry C., Jr. – Research in Rural Education, 1985
Assesses the extent to which 30 third graders employ phonetically-based spelling strategies in representing synthetic words with high and mid front vowels. Finds spelling of good readers rule-governed and derived from judgement about language while that of poor readers showed less awareness of written language patterns. (LFL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Elementary Education, Grade 3, Language Patterns
Jurenka, Nancy – Teacher Ideas Press, 2006
Teaching phonemic awareness can be boring and repetitive in the hands of a teacher who wishes to just use a workbook approach. This delightful book packs loads of fun into 75 lesson plans, providing educators with myriad creative strategies for integrating word study with children's picture books. Each lesson includes a read-aloud book…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Reading Skills, Reading Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Braun, Carl – Reading Horizons, 1978
Outlines reading activities that can be correlated with children's literature; focuses on the development of vocabulary, syntactic, and graphophonic skills. (MAI)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Reading Instruction
Hatcher, Peter – 1994
Reflecting the large amount of evidence linking children's progress in learning to read to their phonological awareness, this manual presents a program of phonological and phonological linkage activities, a set of reproducible record sheets, and 54 picture sheets used in the program. After an introduction and guide to the program, the manual…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Foreign Countries, Phonemes, Phonology
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Schickedanz, Judith A. – Young Children, 1981
Argues that phonemic awareness in young readers may be knowledge that is constructed in the unique situation of trying to match speech to an alphabetic orthography. Stages of learning about print, teaching children about written language, and the roles of alphabet recognition and perceptual-motor skills in learning to read are discussed.…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Phonemic Awareness, Phonemics
Weaver, Constance – 1994
Various lines of research demonstrate that children do not need intensive phonics instruction to develop the functional command of letter/sound patterns that they need as readers. The fact that children normally learn highly complex processes and systems by merely interacting with the external world is perhaps the most important reason why…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Emergent Literacy, Instructional Effectiveness, Literature Reviews
Beissel, George R. – 1994
Suggesting that beginning reading should be a combination of phonics instruction along with the "whole word" approach, this book presents 56 brief and concentrated units of study that demonstrate that both systems can work together to improve the process of learning to read. In all units in the book, learners have the opportunity to read complete…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction, Integrated Curriculum, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
Schiller, Pam – 2000
Combining the language experience approach and phonics instruction, this guide provides parents and early childhood teachers a comprehensive resource for developing a strong foundation for pre-readers. The guide offers over 1,000 activities, games, fingerplays, songs, tongue-twisters, poems, and stories for the letters of the alphabet to develop a…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Emergent Literacy, Games, Language Experience Approach
Blachman, Benita A.; Ball, Eileen Wynne; Black, Rochella; Tangel, Darlene M. – 2000
In order to help kindergartners and first graders who need extra work on their literacy skills, this book offers a plan for teaching phonemic awareness and letter sound correspondence. The plan in the book is a developmentally sequenced, 11-week program to give students repeated opportunities to practice and enhance their beginning reading and…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Elementary School Students, Instructional Materials, Kindergarten Children
Smith, Elizabeth A. – 1986
In the 1920s and 1930s, interpretations of reading readiness held that learning to read occurred at a specific point in cognitive development. Postponement of reading instruction until a child reached this stage of maturity was widely accepted at that time, and throughout the 1940s and 1950s. The 1960s marked a transition period in terms of…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Beginning Reading, Cognitive Development, Developmental Stages