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Smith, Frank, (Ed.) – 1973
Psycholinguistics has offered many new insights into the development of reading, e.g., only a small part of the information necessary for reading comprehension comes from the printed page, comprehension must precede the identification of individual words, and reading is not decoding to spoken language. These views are elaborated in this collection…
Descriptors: Dialects, Oral Reading, Phonemics, Phonics
Goodacre, Elizabeth J. – 1972
British research developments in 1972 in the areas of reading standards, dyslexia, remedial provision, length of schooling, language and reading, and materials and medium are summarized in this booklet. Also included are annotated listings of articles and books covering such subjects as teaching methods, cultural deprivation, personality and…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Annotated Bibliographies, Disadvantaged, Dyslexia
McCulloch, Myrna – 1997
Phonetic content/handwriting instruction begins by teaching the sounds of, and letter formation for the 70 "Orton" phonograms which are the commonly-used correct spelling patterns for the 45 sounds of English speech. The purpose for teaching the sound/symbol relationship first in isolation, without key words or pictures (explicitly), is to give…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Childrens Writing, Handwriting, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
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McCann, Edward – Reading, 1970
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Evaluation Needs, Initial Teaching Alphabet, Literature Reviews
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Smith, Philip T.; And Others – British Journal of Psychology, 1982
Discusses two studies of English speakers' understanding of the English spelling system. Comparative analysis suggests that seven-year-olds are as sophisticated as adults in extracting many of the linguistic factors which influence stress assignment, but they lack the "heterogeneous" structure of the lexicon that is characteristic of the…
Descriptors: Children, College Students, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries
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Lindamood, Patricia C.; And Others – Annals of Dyslexia, 1992
This paper argues that the ability to rapidly compare phonemes is a primary sensory-cognitive function underlying self-correction in word recognition and spelling and thus, indirectly, reading comprehension. Such phonological defects can be addressed both preventively and remedially using procedures that are fundamentally different from typical…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Processes, Phonemes
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Brunn, Michael – Reading Teacher, 2002
Considers how the use of graphic organizers helps students understand difficult concepts about literacy. Notes that graphic and other visual organizers help students to understand interconcept relationships by presenting the information spatially. Describes the four-square strategy which integrates specific aspects of phonics instruction,…
Descriptors: Graphic Organizers, Handwriting, Holistic Approach, Instructional Improvement
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Invernizzi, Marcia; Hayes, Latisha – Reading Research Quarterly, 2004
A team of first-grade teachers began to question their literacy/phonics program, which used a whole-class format for instruction. The teachers felt that teaching the whole class did not allow them to meet the diverse needs of all their students. One of the teachers introduced the rest of the team to developmental-spelling research (i.e., research…
Descriptors: Spelling Instruction, Phonics, Spelling, Developmental Stages
Stetson, Elton G. – 1982
While the look-say versus the phonics controversy has existed for years in reading instruction, a similar debate regarding spelling instruction is only now emerging out of the literature and into the hands of the classroom teacher. "Subskill" spelling, most frequently found in current spelling programs, presumes that good spelling is achieved by…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Educational Trends, Elementary Education, Holistic Approach
Manning, Gary, Ed.; Manning, Maryann, Ed. – 1989
This 25-chapter anthology includes the ideas of many of the leading authorities on whole language and contains chapters on the meaning of whole language, the skills movement, reading and writing development, and teacher autonomy. Chapters are: "Whole Language: What's New?" (Bess Altwerger and others); "Language Arts Basics: Advocacy…
Descriptors: Anthologies, Back to Basics, Educational Trends, Elementary Education
Bailey, Sandra; Borczak, Cynthia; Stankiewicz, Amy – 2002
This report describes a program for advancing student writing skills through the use of systematic and creative phonics instruction. The targeted population consisted of first and fourth grade students in a middle class suburban community located in the suburbs of Chicago. The problems of poor phonics skills and writing abilities were documented…
Descriptors: Action Research, Elementary Education, Grade 1, Grade 4
Oklahoma State Dept. of Education, Oklahoma City. – 1999
This "how-to" booklet was compiled by Oklahoma's "Phonics Task Force" to help teachers of K-3 students further incorporate phonics into daily reading instruction using a systematic approach--one that is logical, sequential, and orderly. The booklet states that the use of phonics in Oklahoma's core curriculum has been promoted…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Core Curriculum, Oral Reading, Phonemic Awareness
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Ehri, Linnea C.; Wilce, Lee S. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1980
Results of a study in which first graders learned ten unfamiliar function words in two different formats indicated that sentence readers learned more about the syntactic and semantic identities of function words, whereas list readers remembered their orthographic identities better and could pronounce the words faster and more accurately in…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Function Words, Learning Modalities, Phonics
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White, Thomas G. – Reading Research Quarterly, 2005
Fifteen regular grade 2 teachers used a set of 150 written lessons that were designed to develop, over the course of a school year, low and normally achieving students' ability to decode by analogy (i.e., to read unknown words using known words). The lessons provided (1) a planned sequence for teaching phonic elements including common spelling…
Descriptors: Grade 2, Sight Method, Word Recognition, Teaching Methods
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Fletcher-Flinn, Claire M.; Shankweile, Donald; Frost, Stephen J. – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2004
The Discrepancy Hypothesis posits that children early in the acquisition process read visually (holistically) and spell phonologically. This claim was examined and rejected. We investigated reading and spelling in Grade 1 and Grade 2 children using controlled non-word and word materials with a variety of orthographic patterns. While reading and…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, Spelling, Emergent Literacy, Grade 1
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