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Raven, Jennifer N. – 1997
Most educators agree that an approach balanced between phonics and whole language is the best method of teaching beginning readers. Marie Carbo (1996) discusses the importance of focusing on a balanced approach to reading, because different students have different learning styles. Children who learn best with phonics instruction have analytic and…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Cognitive Style, Instructional Effectiveness, Language Skills
Carbo, Marie; Cole, Robert W. – American School Board Journal, 1995
Although learning to read well is essential for future success, many children are neither proficient nor avid readers. There is no single "right" approach to reading instruction; teachers should abandon the phonics/whole-language debate and adapt strategies to children's preferred reading styles. Principals should model reading behavior…
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Cognitive Style, Modeling (Psychology), Phonics
Partridge, Susan – 1991
There is much more to a learning disabled (LD) child's successful learning than part-to-whole or whole-to-part instruction. Among the many factors to be considered are his/her learning style, interests, abilities, aptitudes, health, and parental support. Instructional programs for learning disabled children should be based on the students'…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Elementary Secondary Education, Individual Characteristics, Instructional Effectiveness
Brod, Shirley – 1999
The guide provides adult literacy teachers with background information in adult learning and the performance-based approach to literacy education. The first section reviews theory and research on adult learning, including the factors affecting learning (language background, expectations, gender, learning styles and modes, age and health,…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Learning, Age Differences, Classroom Techniques