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Peer reviewedAkande, Adebowale – Early Child Development and Care, 2000
Used multiple-baseline design to assess the utility of presenting three types of cues when teaching an abstract concept such as colors to three children with autism: plain, label, and symbol. Found colors presented with cues were easier to learn than color without cues. Findings support the need for sensitivity for the highly individualized…
Descriptors: Autism, Children, Color, Cues
Peer reviewedVandever, Thomas R.; Neville, Donald D. – American Journal of Mental Deficiency, 1974
Descriptors: Children, Exceptional Child Research, Mental Retardation, Mild Mental Retardation
Peer reviewedMarsh, George; Mineo, R. James – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1977
Using a forced-choice matching-to-sample procedure five factors were varied: position of phoneme; contrast between words; type of phoneme; redundant visual cue; and allophonic variation. Performance improved significantly after four days of training for all but allophonic variation. Redundant visual cue greatly improved performance during training…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Morphemes, Performance Factors, Phonemes
Peer reviewedStoefen-Fisher, Jill M.; And Others – Journal of Special Education, 1989
Twenty prelingually deaf students, aged six-eight, were able to identify words better when presented in a print-plus-graphic-sign condition compared to a print-only condition. The initial use of the graphic representation of signs with the printed words also facilitated the children's immediate retention when reading the printed word only.…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Deafness, Instructional Effectiveness, Performance Factors


