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Schenkat, Randy – 1980
This paper offers seven practical suggestions to teachers who are teaching phonics to hard-to-teach children (the learning disabled, the educable mentally retarded, slow learners, and the culturally disadvantaged) and who are not experiencing the success they desire. The suggestions are made under the following topics: (1) cumulative learning and…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Change Strategies, Classroom Techniques, Elementary Education
Denton, Carolyn A.; Hasbrouck, Jan E. – 2000
This booklet is part of a series of seven booklets designed to introduce aspects of effective reading instruction that should be considered when teaching reading to students with disabilities. It focuses on essential skill building and teaching activities related to developing a child's use of phonics, or the ability to use the sounds of letters…
Descriptors: Academic Accommodations (Disabilities), Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education, Individualized Education Programs
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Joseph, Laurice M. – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2002
Word boxes and word sorts are two phonic approaches that help children make connections between sound and print by gaining an awareness of the phonological and orthographic features of words. This article provides step-by-step procedures for using these approaches in small-group and whole-class settings. The use of peer tutors is discussed.…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Class Activities, Elementary Education, Group Instruction
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Harrison, Gina L. – Exceptionality Education Canada, 2005
Spelling strategies were examined based on error analysis and strategy reports for errors and correct spellings for 50 Grade 4 and 5 students with and without spelling difficulties. Based on their own reports, all students possessed a repertoire of effective spelling strategies. Strategy use, however, differed as a function of spelling accuracy…
Descriptors: Grade 4, Grade 5, Reading Difficulties, Memory
Mihail, Brunette A. – 1986
Focusing on spelling as an integral part of the writing process, this annotated bibliography addresses the problem of developing individualized, focused, and relevant methods for teaching spelling to elementary students. The annotations are organized around two specific questions: What strategies do children use to spell words and what…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Cognitive Development, Elementary Education, Error Analysis (Language)
Tucker, Elizabeth Sulzby – 1977
Teachers working with a language experience approach to reading may use word-sorting activities as a means of exploring the letter/sound concepts and semantic concepts that children are forming. Using words that are already in a child's reading vocabulary, words that the child has made into sight vocabulary, and words that the child has requested…
Descriptors: Classification, Concept Formation, Generalization, Language Experience Approach
Pollard, Rebecca S. – Western Publishing House, 1891
This Manual provides the foundation for a reading and spelling course which avoids use of the phonic method. Instead of teaching the word as a whole and afterward subjecting it to phonic analysis, this Synthetic Method takes the sounds of the letters for the starting point, and with these sounds lay a foundation firm and broad, upon which is built…
Descriptors: Spelling, Teaching Methods, Phonics, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
Katz, Ina; Singer, Harry – 1981
A study tested the instructional hypothesis that variation in instructional methods in the initial stages of formal reading development will differentially develop subsystems for attaining comprehension. The 91 kindergarten and first grade students in the study received their usual reading instruction plus supplementary instruction in one of four…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Influences, Instructional Systems, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
Midkiff, Ronald G.; Smith, Gary – 1969
The first part of this Linguistics Research and Demonstration Project report presents articles which have greater implications for a theory of instruction in English than for practical activities for classroom utilization. It includes "Changing Emphasis on Formal Language Study,""The Growing Importance of and Emphasis on Oral…
Descriptors: English Curriculum, English Instruction, Language Acquisition, Learning Activities
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De Oliveira, Solange Ribeiro – English Language Teaching Journal, 1978
A discussion is presented that shows that, in teaching reading in a foreign language, the aims, procedures, and techniques can be virtually the same as those once used for the acquisition of reading skills in the mother tongue. (Author/HP)
Descriptors: Audiolingual Skills, English (Second Language), Games, Language Instruction
Jones, Monica L. – 1996
There are compelling reasons for integrating phonics into the adult English-as-a-Second-Language (ESL) curriculum. The adult ESL student has the analytical capability to understand phoneme-grapheme relationships and can be taught to use any transferable native-language literacy skills in English spelling. In this essay, the potential of phonics…
Descriptors: Adult Education, English (Second Language), Instructional Effectiveness, Language Research
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Edelen-Smith, Patricia – Intervention in School and Clinic, 1997
Research indicates a strong relationship between early phoneme awareness and later reading success and the benefits of explicitly teaching phoneme awareness skills. This article presents a set of developmental phoneme awareness training activities that the special educator can integrate collaboratively into existing kindergarten and first-grade…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Early Childhood Education, Grade 1, Kindergarten
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Pressley, Michael; Roehrig, Alysia; Bogner, Kristen; Raphael, Lisa M.; Dolezal, Sara – Focus on Exceptional Children, 2002
This article reviews the evidence for balanced literacy instruction in the elementary years. The case is made that the balanced instructional model is particularly appropriate and beneficial for students who have initial difficulties in learning to read and write. Key features of successful reading instruction programs are described. (Contains…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Elementary Education, Holistic Approach, Learning Disabilities
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Abbott, Mary; Walton, Cheryl; Greenwood, Charles R. – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 2002
A study investigated how phonemic-awareness research and intervention knowledge was successfully translated for teacher implementation in two kindergarten classes (n=27) over three years. Research-validated strategies were first identified, the research was translated into teacher friendly materials/procedures, teachers participated in choosing…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Educational Strategies, Inservice Education, Kindergarten
Biggins, Catherine M.; Sainz, JoAnn – 1997
The Easy Steps to Reading Independence (ESTRI) Program is a reading program to be used to support whole language or basal reader programs by enabling limited ability or non-readers to begin reading, or to remediate reading disabilities, at age and grade appropriate levels immediately, without requiring the students to know sight words before…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Reading Difficulties
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