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Terepocki, Megan; Kruk, Richard S.; Willows, Dale M. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2002
A study investigated letter orientation confusions (reversals) in the reading and writing of 10 children with reading disabilities and 10 typical readers (age 10). Individuals with reading disability made more orientation confusions. Orientation errors were more frequent for reversible than for nonreversible items in tasks involving long-term…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Graphemes, Incidence, Learning Disabilities
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Goikoetxea, Edurne – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2005
Evidence of phonological awareness levels usually comes from English-speaking children. The evidence in Spanish is scarce. The present study examined the phonological awareness of syllables, onsets--rimes, and phonemes, extending the Treiman and Zukowski (1991) results to preliterate and literate Spanish-speaking children. The sample comprised…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, Emergent Literacy, Spanish Speaking, Syllables
Neuman, Susan B. – Early Childhood Today, 2005
There has been an explosion of knowledge over the last few years about how children's earliest experiences set the stage for success in learning to read and write. Most experts agree that children who reach kindergarten with certain characteristics--an interest in books, a fondness for conversation, a curiosity about the world--are more likely to…
Descriptors: Reading Readiness, Writing Readiness, School Readiness, Reading Aloud to Others
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Zsiga, Elizabeth C. – Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 2003
This study compares patterns of consonant-to-consonant timing at word boundaries in English and Russian and investigates the roles of transfer and the emergence of linguistic universals in second language (L2) articulation. Native Russian speakers learning English and native English speakers learning Russian produced phrases in English and Russian…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Second Language Learning, Language Universals, Russian
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Tampas, Joanna W.; Harkrider, Ashley W.; Hedrick, Mark S. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2005
Auditory event-related potentials (mismatch negativity and P300) and behavioral discrimination were measured to synthetically generated consonant-vowel (CV) speech and nonspeech contrasts in 10 young adults with normal auditory systems. Previous research has demonstrated that behavioral and P300 responses reflect a phonetic, categorical level of…
Descriptors: Phonetics, Young Adults, Acoustics, Auditory Perception
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Davidson, Lisa – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2005
Ultrasound can be used to address unresolved questions in phonological theory. To date, some studies have shown that results from ultrasound imaging can shed light on how differences in phonological elements are implemented. Phenomena that have been investigated include transitional schwa, vowel coalescence, and transparent vowels. A study of…
Descriptors: Vowels, Phonology, Investigations, Articulation (Speech)
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Duncan, Lynne G.; Cole, Pascale; Seymour, Philip H. K.; Magnan, Annie – Journal of Child Language, 2006
Phonological awareness is thought to become increasingly analytic during early childhood. This study examines whether the proposed developmental sequence (syllable[right arrow]onset-rime[right arrow]phoneme) varies according to the characteristics of a child's native language. Experiment 1 compares the phonological segmentation skills of English…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Reading Skills, French, Reading Instruction
Murray, Bruce A.; And Others – 1993
A study examined whether reading alphabet books to prekindergarten children increased their awareness of sounds spoken in words. Subjects, 42 mainly low-income African-American children (63% of whom were boys) in three intact prekindergarten classes in three public elementary schools in a small southeastern city, were administered three pretest…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Black Students, Classroom Research, Emergent Literacy
Smith, Sylvia Barrus – 1996
This study evaluated the effectiveness of phonological awareness instruction with 61 kindergarten children in two schools who had been identified as low in phonological awareness. The children received either: (1) instruction at the phoneme level only, (2) instruction at the onset-rime level before instruction at the phoneme level, or (3) no…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Decoding (Reading), Early Intervention, High Risk Students
Frerichs, Linda C. – 1993
An exploratory study investigated the relationship between perceptions and practices in reading and language arts, and examined whether teachers were using practices to develop students' literacy skills suggested in work by Marie Clay. Subjects, 16 out of a possible 22 kindergarten teachers in one southern school district, responded to a 138-item…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Kindergarten, Language Arts, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
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Goodman, Yetta – English Journal, 1974
Three suggestions are offered to the teacher of reading: permit the students to read, encourage students to guess or predict, and focus the students' attention on meaning. (JH)
Descriptors: Context Clues, Language Ability, Linguistic Competence, Miscue Analysis
Kamii, Constance; And Others – 1987
A study examined the phoneme-grapheme correspondence in native English-speaking kindergartners' spelling and compared it to the results of similar research with Spanish-speaking children. It tested the hypothesis that English-speaking children make their first grapheme-sound correspondences differently because of phonological differences in the…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, English, Error Patterns, Kindergarten
Moon, Gui-Sun – 1987
A discussion of the nasal harmony of Aguaruna, a language of the Jivaroan family in South America, approaches the subject from the viewpoint of generative phonology. This theory of phonology proposes an underlying nasal consonant, later deleted, that accounts for vowel nasalization. Complex rules that suppose a complex system of vowel and…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Diachronic Linguistics, Distinctive Features (Language), Generative Phonology
Scliar-Cabral, Leonor; And Others – 1990
This study investigated the relative ability of literate (n=24), semi-literate (n=45), and non-literate (n=21) adults to erase the initial consonant or vowel from non-words and pronounce the remaining phonemes. It was hypothesized that difficulty in removing the initial consonant from the vowel with which it coarticulates is due not only to…
Descriptors: Adults, Comparative Analysis, Context Clues, Error Patterns
Greif, Ivo P. – 1981
A study examined the usefulness of two rules of syllabification: (1) if the first vowel or vowel digraph in a word is followed by two consonants that are not parts of a consonant digraph, the first syllable ends with the first of the two consonants, such as, nor-mal; and (2) if the first vowel or vowel digraph in a word is followed by a single…
Descriptors: Definitions, Language Usage, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Phonics
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