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Pflaum, Susanna W.; And Others – Journal of Educational Research, 1980
Pupil behaviors during oral reading influence teacher response more strongly than do preconceived pupil status variables. The research findings are also related to the formation of teacher expectations. (CJ)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Classroom Environment, Oral Reading, Primary Education

Glushko, Robert J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1979
Results refute current claims that words are read aloud by retrieving a single pronunciation from memory and that pseudowords are pronounced by using abstract spelling-to-sound rules. Instead, it appears that words and pseudowords are pronounced using similar kinds of orthographic and phonological knowledge. (Author/CP)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Oral Reading, Orthographic Symbols, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence

Masland, Susan W. – Elementary School Journal, 1979
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Minority Group Children, Oral Reading, Program Descriptions

Povenmire, E. Kingsley – Reading Teacher, 1977
Using verse choir increases students' confidence and helps them appreciate the joy of literature. (HOD)
Descriptors: Choral Speaking, Elementary Education, Group Behavior, Interpretive Reading

Lamberg, Walter J.; McCaleb, Joseph L. – Journal of Reading, 1977
This study investigated responses made by prospective teachers when conducting an Informal Oral Reading Inventory with a student whose oral reading exhibited some features of black dialect. (HOD)
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Miscue Analysis, Nonstandard Dialects, Oral Reading
McKenzie, Moira – Notes from Workshop Center for Open Education, 1976
Argues that when reading is taught as a communication skill and as a further extension of language, the teacher should be concerned with helping the student to link up and become involved with the author's message. A child should be encouraged to search for the meaning of what he reads when he begins to learn to read. (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Communication Skills, Early Childhood Education, Oral Reading

Miller, Samuel D.; Smith, Donald E. P. – Reading Research and Instruction, 1990
Investigates: (1) whether differences exist in comprehension when children listen, read orally, and read silently; and (2) whether such differences exist for all readers. Finds that relationships between the three modalities vary as a function of level of reading competency. (SR)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Grade 3, Grade 5

Peterson, Susan K.; And Others – Teaching Exceptional Children, 1990
Two interventions, both using repeated readings combined with a simple error correction technique and precision teaching, were used with two at-risk elementary students to improve their oral reading skills. Both interventions (language experience approach stories and passages from a basal reading program) worked equally well. (JDD)
Descriptors: Basal Reading, Elementary Education, High Risk Students, Intervention

Kozleski, Elizabeth B. – Reading Improvement, 1989
Examines the effects of self-monitoring and task-specific strategy training on a poor reader's oral reading miscues. Finds that self-monitoring reduces oral reading errors but that the combination of both strategies yields no further reduction in miscues. (RS)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Grade 3, Miscue Analysis, Oral Reading

Weber, William R.; Henderson, Edmund H. – Reading Psychology, 1989
Investigates whether a computer-based word study method, emphasizing automaticity of response, would improve students' word recognition, spelling, and oral reading performance. Finds support for a verbal efficiency theory of reading, in which the key to developing reading efficiency is developing word recognition that is automatic. (RS)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Elementary Education, Grade 3, Grade 4

Derr-Minneci, Tami F.; Shapiro, Edward S. – School Psychology Quarterly, 1992
Examined effects of who administers behavioral assessment (teacher versus school psychologist), physical location of assessment (reading group versus teacher's desk versus office), and whether performance is timed or untimed for oral reading rates of 100 third and fourth graders. Results showed significant effects for reading level, tester,…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Evaluation Methods, Grade 3

Morris, Darrell; Nelson, Laurie – Reading Research and Instruction, 1992
Describes how a second grade teacher implemented a small-group, support-reading strategy with low-achieving readers. Describes (1) characteristics of the innercity classroom; (2) explanation of how the instructional strategy was introduced and implemented over time; (3) evidence of the intervention's success; and (4) comments on the…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Grade 2, Instructional Effectiveness, Oral Reading

Hasbrouck, Jan E.; Tindal, Gerald – Teaching Exceptional Children, 1992
A curriculum-based measurement approach to evaluating and improving oral reading fluency (ORF) in grades 2-5 is presented. A table of norms (medians) in ORF is provided, based on approximately 9,000 students. Specific classroom uses of the norms are suggested, such as use in developing individualized objectives for students with disabilities. (DB)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Elementary Education, Individualized Instruction, Informal Reading Inventories

Parker, Richard; And Others – Journal of Special Education, 1992
Twenty years of research on the Maze, a classroom-based reading measure for students with learning disabilities, is summarized. Overall, the research is supportive of the Maze. However, the most common version requires revision to obtain minimum construct validity, and additional research is needed on reliability and usefulness of alternate forms.…
Descriptors: Cloze Procedure, Construct Validity, Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Disabilities

Thompson, Irene – Language Learning, 1991
This study investigated factors associated with the acquisition of second-language pronunciation and methodological problems associated with the study of foreign accents. Thirty-six native speakers of Russian fluent in English read specifically constructed English sentences and a prose passage, and talked spontaneously about their daily routine.…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Immigrants, Language Research, Language Skills