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Otto, Wayne; Stallard, Cathy – 1975
Sight word lists have been used since prior to 20 B.C. and have changed forms many times. Today sight word lists are numerous and are widely and variously used. They differ in source, intended purpose and/or audience, and criteria for including specific words. Despite the differences, there is much agreement that they do reflect the most basic…
Descriptors: Basic Vocabulary, Language, Reading, Reading Research

Fabry, Bernard D; And Others – American Journal of Mental Deficiency, 1984
Six mentally retarded students (12-22 years old) were taught to name sight words during token-exchange periods of a token-reinforcement system. Sequential teaching of new sets of sight words via a multiple-baseline design evaluated the procedure. Five of the 6 students acquired sight-word vocabularies. Data support the educational use of…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Incidental Learning, Mental Retardation, Sight Vocabulary

Hood, Joyce – Reading Teacher, 1977
Contains definitions, approaches, and guidelines for using sight vocabulary. (Author/RB)
Descriptors: Definitions, Elementary Education, Guidelines, Reading Instruction

Silberberg, Norman E.; Silberberg, Margaret C. – Journal of Special Education, 1971
Described are research and hypotheses concerning hyperlexic children - those who can read words at a level significantly above their level of general verbal and academic functioning. (Author)
Descriptors: High Achievement, Reading Ability, Reading Skills, Sight Vocabulary

Groff, Patrick – Ohio Reading Teacher, 1994
States that in the 1970s, sight words existed in a "topsy-turvy world" in which the variety of definitions was confusing. Suggests that readers recognize sight words as single, holistic units without segmenting and attending to letters one at a time, and without sounding out and blending letters sequentially. Explains the connection…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Phonics, Reading Instruction, Sight Method
Conley, Colleen M.; Derby, K. Mark; Roberts-Gwinn, Michelle; Weber, Kimberly P.; McLaughlin, T.F. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2004
This study compared the copy, cover, and compare method to a picture-word matching method for teaching sight word recognition. Participants were 5 kindergarten students with less than preprimer sight word vocabularies who were enrolled in a public school in the Pacific Northwest. A multielement design was used to evaluate the effects of the two…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Maintenance, Kindergarten, Sight Vocabulary
Cates, Gary L.; Rhymer, Katrina N. – Reading Improvement, 2006
An ABAB withdrawal design was used to investigate the effects of explicit timing on accurate oral reading rate of sight word phrases of four elementary students demonstrating difficulty with reading. During baseline the students were exposed to flash cards with sight word phrases and asked to read them out loud and were not made aware that they…
Descriptors: Oral Reading, Reading Rate, Elementary School Students, Reading Difficulties
MICKEL, MARGARET ANN – 1967
CLASSROOM PROCEDURES FOR DEVELOPING WORD STUDY SKILLS IN BOTH GROUP AND INDIVIDUAL SITUATIONS ARE PRESENTED. PROCEDURES FOR PRIMARY GRADES ARE CLASSIFIED UNDER THREE MAJOR LEVELS--THE WHOLE WORD, THE SEMI-ANALYTICAL, AND THE INTENSIVE ANALYSIS APPROACH. TEN PROCEDURES ARE PRESENTED, AND GAMES AND ACTIVITIES FOR ACCOMPLISHING WORD STUDY SKILLS ARE…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Kinesthetic Methods, Phonics, Sight Vocabulary
Armstrong, Edwardene, Comp. – 1975
Forty-nine reading games were designed by reading aides in the ESEA Title I Primary Reading Aide Program in Omaha, Nebraska for practice and mastery of specific reading skills at the primary level. Games are listed under these skill areas: alphabet, consonants, digraphs, rhyming words, sight words, and vowels. An illustration is provided for each…
Descriptors: Phonics, Primary Education, Reading Games, Reading Instruction

Hendrickson, Jo; And Others – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1978
The effectiveness of two teaching procedures--antecedent and contingent modeling--in teaching basic sight vocabulary to learning disabled children was tested with two primary-school-age boys with severe reading disabilities. (Author/DLS)
Descriptors: Exceptional Child Research, Learning Disabilities, Reading Difficulty, Sight Vocabulary

Balch, Marian C.; Johnson, Dale D. – Contemporary Education, 1977
Descriptors: Definitions, Early Reading, Instructional Improvement, Sight Vocabulary

Simms, Rochelle B.; Falcon, Susan Claire – Teaching Exceptional Children, 1987
A method for teaching sight words to elementary level learning disabled children is proposed which relies on input organization, a strategy in which teachers reorganize information into small, related units for instruction. Also included are sample word categories, results of the method's use, and recommendations for use. (DB)
Descriptors: Basal Reading, Classification, Elementary Education, Learning Disabilities

Englert, Carol Sue; And Others – Journal of Special Education, 1985
Eleven mildly handicapped elementary students were taught to spell new words by using spelling patterns from known words. Control Ss learned to read and spell sight word vocabulary. Experimental Ss were significantly superior in spelling high-frequency sight words and untrained transfer words. (Author/CL)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Learning Processes, Mild Disabilities, Reading Instruction
Summers, Edward G. – B. C. Journal of Special Education, 1984
A model is described for generating Quick Word Tests to assess the sight recognition vocabulary of secondary students along with a high utility list of 596 words to screen automatic recognition sight vocabulary for native speakers, second language and special education students, and adults in basic education and literacy classes. (Author/CL)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Reading Difficulties, Reading Tests, Secondary Education
Harris, W. T.; Rickoff, A. J.; Bailey, Mark – D. D. Merrill, 1887
This textbook is a first reader that focuses on moving children from spoken to written vocabulary and recognizing by sight words already familiar by sound. The combination of construction with interpretation, of writing with reading leads directly to intelligent understanding and expression of thoughts on the written or printed page. It is…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Reading Instruction, Written Language, Vocabulary Development