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Peer reviewedLoBello, Steven G.; Wolfe, Gerryl L.; Gulgoz, Sami; Doleys, Brad B. – Reading Improvement, 1998
Investigates the role of background color on phonological decoding in children with reading difficulties--10 elementary students with reading difficulties and 10 controls read pseudowords presented on white or colored backgrounds. Finds students with a history of reading difficulties pronounced fewer pseudowords than controls for either…
Descriptors: Color, Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading), Dyslexia
Peer reviewedYap, Regina; Van Der Leu, Aryan – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 1993
Compares dyslexic children with normal readers on measures of phonological decoding and automatic word processing. Finds that dyslexics have a deficit in automatic phonological decoding skills. Discusses results within the framework of the phonological deficit and the automatization deficit hypotheses. (RS)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading), Dyslexia, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedFrith, Uta; Wimmer, Heinz; Landerl, Karin – Scientific Studies of Reading, 1998
Investigates word and nonword reading in German- and English-speaking children. Suggests that low orthographic consistency, as in English, necessitates the use of complex and error-prone strategies in phonological recoding (translating printed words into spoken equivalents), whereas high consistency, as in German, allows phonological recoding into…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, English
Peer reviewedBeech, John R.; Awaida, May – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1992
This study, with 38 9-year-old poor readers and 40 reading age-matched normally achieving readers, examined qualitative differences in poor readers relative to normally achieving readers of the same reading level. Results suggest that poor readers have worse grapheme phoneme conversion skills and greater reluctance to relinquish the lexical route…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, Phonetics
Peer reviewedStahl, Steven A. – Reading and Writing Quarterly: Overcoming Learning Difficulties, 1998
Suggests that children often get confusing or conflicting instruction that possibly exacerbates initial problems. Reviews approaches to teaching children with reading problems. Concludes that effective phonics instruction for children with reading problems is both novel and systematic. Recommends a two-pronged solution: provide one clear and…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, Instructional Effectiveness
Ceaser, Lisbeth – 1991
A study investigated the transfer effect of three different word recognition strategies. Subjects were 90 first- through fourth-grade children randomly drawn from an elementary school population to serve in the experimental group and a like number assigned to a non-instructed control group. Strategies taught to subjects were a graphophonic…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, Instructional Effectiveness
Peer reviewedGreenberg, Daphne; Ehri, Linnea C.; Perin, Dolores – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2002
Analyzes adult literacy students' utilization of orthographic and phonological strategies to read sight words, to decode nonwords, to spell words, and to detect rhyming words. Indicates that when encountering difficulties adults were less likely than children to use phonological strategies and were more likely than children to rely on visual or…
Descriptors: Adult Literacy, Adults, Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading)
Strauss, Steven L.; Altwerger, Bess – Journal of Early Childhood Literacy, 2007
US government mandates to implement intensive phonics instruction in elementary classrooms invoke an alleged scientific superiority of this approach over more meaning-centered models. But curiously absent from this scientific enterprise is a study of the phonics system itself. Advocates of intensive phonics have not demonstrated that the commonly…
Descriptors: Classroom Research, Phonics, Whole Language Approach, Reading Instruction
Peer reviewedThompkins, Amanda C.; Binder, Katherine S. – Reading Research Quarterly, 2003
Examines the relations among phonological awareness, short-term memory, orthographic ability, contextual information, and reading skill in a study of 60 functionally illiterate adults enrolled in Adult Basic Education programs and a group of elementary-school children. Concludes that adults seem to be relying less on phonological decoding, which…
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education
Peer reviewedShu, Hua; Anderson, Richard C. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1997
Finds that third and fifth graders were able to select characters containing the correct radicals (a component of Chinese characters that provides information about the character's meaning) even when the characters as a whole were unfamiliar to them. Finds that good readers displayed more awareness of radicals than poor readers. (RS)
Descriptors: Chinese, Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education
Peer reviewedJuel, Connie – Reading Research Quarterly, 1980
Conditions were examined in which second and third graders used context to identify words. The data indicated that good readers were predominantly text-driven, while poor readers used more context clues. (MKM)
Descriptors: Children, Comparative Analysis, Context Clues, Decoding (Reading)
Perfetti, Charles A. – 1981
The relationship between speech and print is essentially asymmetrical and changes as the reading ability of the child improves. For the child who has succeeded at decoding, the asymmetry implies that commonalities between speech and print are more important than their differences. Three hypothetical observation points illustrate the similarity…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education
Peer reviewedLindgren, Scott D.; And Others – Child Development, 1985
Findings suggest that (1) dyslexia is more prevalent in the United States than in Italy, (2) reading disabilities are strongly associated with disorders of verbal processing in both countries (although some American dyslexics also show visual-motor deficits), and (3) there is a greater dissociation between reading comprehension and decoding in…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading), Dyslexia, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedJenkins, Barbara L.; And Others – Reading Teacher, 1980
Reports on an experiment that investigated whether third graders designated as good readers were significantly better than poor readers at hypothesis testing when decoding words. (HOD)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, Grade 3
Peer reviewedDefior, Sylvia; And Others – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 1996
Examines effects of several lexical and sublexical variables (lexical category and frequency, syllabic structure, word length) in reading acquisition in a transparent language--Spanish. Compares effects of variables in 140 normal and poor young readers. Finds that all variables produced a significant effect on the number of errors made by the…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, Error Analysis (Language)
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