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Ktori, Maria; Pitchford, Nicola J. – Journal of Research in Reading, 2009
This study investigated the relative extent to which developing readers (6- and 9-year-olds) of English (deep) or Greek (transparent) orthography exhibit serial and exterior letter effects in letter position encoding. Participants were given a visual search task that required detection of a pre-specified target letter within a random five-letter…
Descriptors: Spelling, Orthographic Symbols, Reading Processes, Visual Stimuli
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McKague, Meredith; Davis, Chris; Pratt, Chris; Johnston, Michael B. – Journal of Research in Reading, 2008
Skilled readers were trained to recognise either the oral (n=44) or visual form (n=40) of a set of 32 novel words (oral and visual instantiation, respectively). Training involved learning the "meanings" for the instantiated words and was followed by a visual lexical decision task in which the instantiated words were mixed with real English words…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Phonology, Feedback (Response), Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
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Smith, Frank; Goodman, Kenneth S. – Language Arts, 2008
Ken Goodman and Frank Smith met for the first time in 1970, though they had each been studying and writing, separately, about the reading process for several years prior to that. They commemorated the occasion by collaborating on an article, On the Psycholinguistic Method of Teaching Reading which appeared soon after in The Elementary School…
Descriptors: Reading Research, Psycholinguistics, Reading, Reading Processes
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Cassady, Jerrell C.; Smith, Lawrence L.; Putman, S. Michael – Reading Psychology, 2008
The theoretical and practical implications of examining young children's acquisitions of phonological awareness skills with specific and differentiated processing tasks are explored in this study. The study presents data from 269 kindergarten children completing a phonological awareness protocol that provided information on 14 discrete…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Phonological Awareness, Kindergarten, Literacy
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Bovee, Oliver H. – Education, 1972
Author discusses the many methods and approaches in teaching reading and concludes that it is the teacher that makes the difference. (MB)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Reading Instruction, Reading Processes, Teaching Methods
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Beech, John R. – Journal of Research in Reading, 2005
A theory of how children progress through different phases of reading should be an asset both to reading researchers and teachers alike. The present paper provides a brief review of Ehri's influential four phases of reading development: pre-alphabetic, partial alphabetic, full alphabetic and consolidated alphabetic. The model is flexible enough to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Structures, Reading Skills, Reading Processes, Beginning Reading
Albert, Elaine – 1999
Contrast is one of the great principles of any art--two things that are different are put side-by-side so that both can be seen for comparison. This paper considers initially two kinds of contrast in phonics: the sounds of the five short vowels (a e i o u); and the sequence from left-to-right in sounding out the letters. The paper states that…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Classroom Techniques, Phonics, Primary Education
Thompson, G. Brian – 1999
This paper contends that there is a range of converging evidence that beginning readers use the implicit lexicalized form of phonological recoding, as claimed by the knowledge sources theory. To reinforce the contention, the paper first discusses the alphabetic principle and theories of beginning reading and then considers lexicalized phonological…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Early Childhood Education, Emergent Literacy, Reading Processes
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Cuetos, Fernando; Suarez-Coalla, Paz – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2009
The relationship between written words and their pronunciation varies considerably among different orthographic systems, and these variations have repercussions on learning to read. Children whose languages have deep orthographies must learn to pronounce larger units, such as rhymes, morphemes, or whole words, to achieve the correct pronunciation…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Pronunciation, Phonology, Morphemes
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Lekgoko, Olemme; Winskel, Heather – Perspectives in Education, 2008
The current study investigates how beginner readers learn to read Setswana and English, and whether there is cross-language transference of skills between these two languages. Letter knowledge, phoneme awareness and reading of words and pseudowords in both Setswana and English were assessed in 36 Grade 2 children. A complex pattern emerged.…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Phonological Awareness, Grade 2, Reading Skills
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Allen, P. David – Elementary School Journal, 1972
We can improve reading instruction by using the strengths any child brings to the reading task. (Author)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Cues, Psycholinguistics, Reading Instruction
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Bowey, Judith; Hansen, Julie – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1994
Two groups of grade school children were tested for their ability to use orthographic rimes as functional units of reading by reading pseudowords. The results suggest that the size of the orthographic rime frequency effect reflects the operation of two factors: vocabulary size and grapheme-phoneme conversion skill. (SW)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Children, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Reading Processes
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Conrad, Nicole J.; Levy, Betty Ann – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2007
The ability to recognize letter patterns within words as a single unit is important for fluent reading. This skill is based on previously established memory representations of common letter patterns. The ability to form these memory representations may be impaired in some poor readers, particularly readers with naming speed deficits (NSD). This…
Descriptors: Alphabets, Pattern Recognition, Memory, Reading Research
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Samuels, S. Jay – Language Arts, 1976
In order to have both fluent reading and good comprehension, the student must be brought beyond accuracy to automaticity in decoding. (JH)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Decoding (Reading), Psycholinguistics, Reading Comprehension
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Rachner, Jane – Reading Teacher, 1974
Proposes a Gestalt version of the word family approach to phonics instruction as a way of reducing the number of phonetic units a child must learn to gain total phonetic control of the English language. (TO)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Decoding (Reading), Phonics, Reading Instruction
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