Descriptor
| Class Activities | 4 |
| Language Experience Approach | 4 |
| Student Developed Materials | 4 |
| Reading Instruction | 3 |
| Beginning Reading | 2 |
| Basal Reading | 1 |
| Beginning Writing | 1 |
| Child Development Centers | 1 |
| Cooperative Learning | 1 |
| Dramatic Play | 1 |
| Elementary Education | 1 |
| More ▼ | |
Source
Publication Type
| Reports - Descriptive | 3 |
| Speeches/Meeting Papers | 3 |
| Guides - Classroom - Teacher | 2 |
Education Level
Audience
| Students | 1 |
Location
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Cohn, Regina L. – 1981
The language experience approach (LEA) is a means of using the knowledge of language and one's life experiences to create materials for reading and thoughtful consideration. Therefore, LEA seems to be a viable approach to use both with students who are not familiar with the language used or experiences described in a textbook and with older…
Descriptors: Class Activities, High Schools, Language Experience Approach, Reading Instruction
Warash, Bobbie Gibson; Workman, Melissa – 1992
Over the past several years, teachers at the West Virginia University Child Development Laboratory have used the language experience approach to develop the literacy skills of young children. To increase child involvement, a scrapbook project for 4-year-olds was conducted each Wednesday for 1 academic year. Each child received a scrapbook and…
Descriptors: Child Development Centers, Class Activities, Cooperative Learning, Dramatic Play
McCoy, Linda Jones – 1990
Undergraduate education students can often discuss the language experience approach intelligently, listing advantages and disadvantages with ease, but express bewilderment when it comes time in a reading practicum class to actually use the approach with a child. A teaching guide can serve as an aid to those students who have previously studied the…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Class Activities, Elementary Education, Language Arts
Oxendine, Linda – 1989
A second grade teacher in a rural Appalachian school draws heavily on familiar regional literature and the children's own rich mountain heritage and culture to teach reading to her students, covering the required basal readings in only one day per week. Students use the basals on Mondays and retell the texts on paper. They spend the rest of the…
Descriptors: Basal Reading, Beginning Reading, Beginning Writing, Class Activities


