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Peer reviewedPerry, Leslie Anne – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 1997
This article describes a program in which beginning readers dictate stories to accompany wordless picture books. The stories are turned into classroom "published books" which are used to teach reading and develop student confidence. Step-by-step directions and a brief list of wordless picture books are provided. (CR)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Elementary Education, Picture Books, Reading Instruction
Peer reviewedBear, Donald R. – Visible Language, 1989
Discusses an integrated theory of literacy development with synchrony between beginning stages of reading and spelling. Explores the reasons why beginning readers read disfluently, fingerpoint, and read aloud. Discusses orthographic correlates to these behaviors. Suggests that fluent reading must wait for a certain power in word knowledge.…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Elementary Education, Models, Reading Fluency
Peer reviewedBowey, 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
Peer reviewedCarrillo, Marisol – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 1994
Examines relationships between levels of phonological awareness and early reading ability. Finds significant correlations between metaphonological abilities and reading for kindergarteners but weak or nonexistent correlations in the tasks involving sensitivity to phonological similarities for first graders. Notes that all children who developed…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Correlation, Primary Education, Reading Achievement
Peer reviewedNicholson, Tom – Reading Teacher, 1998
Argues that flashcards can help beginning and struggling readers to identify high-frequency, irregularly spelled words. Describes various ways flashcards can be used to help make a poor reader a better reader. Argues that the key to success is to use flashcards sensibly, in small doses, for fun, and with pizzazz. (SR)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Class Activities, Primary Education, Reading Improvement
Peer reviewedBastien-Toniazzo, Mireille; Jullien, Sandrine – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2001
Determines the nature and role of knowledge constructed by the child at the very beginning of his or her contact with printed words, i.e., during the logographic phase. Indicates that the letters in a word serve as its identifying visual properties as long as, for the child, the sole function of the written language is to encode meaning. (SG)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Cognitive Development, Emergent Literacy, Primary Education
What Works Clearinghouse, 2007
This report is an evaluation of the "Read, Write & Type!"[TM] Learning System, a software program with supporting materials designed to teach beginning reading skills by emphasizing writing as a way to learn to read. The program was developed for six- to nine-year-old students who are just beginning to read and for students who are…
Descriptors: Grade 1, Beginning Reading, Phonemes, Reading Skills
Angle, Mark A.; Porter, Mary; Rhodes, Jean Ann – Teaching Pre K-8, 2007
Kindergarten isn't what it used to be. No longer is kindergarten a place for learning the social skills needed for success at school and sprinkled with a few letters, numbers, shapes and sizes. Today, kindergartners are expected to head to first grade as beginning readers with basic skills in place to ensure their success in core content areas. To…
Descriptors: Learning Readiness, Kindergarten, Parent School Relationship, Family Involvement
Letter Processing and the Formation of Memory Representations in Children with Naming Speed Deficits
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
Wright, Donna-Marie; Ehri, Linnea C. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2007
Sight word learning and memory were studied to clarify how early during development readers process visual letter patterns that are not dictated by phonology, and whether their word learning is influenced by the legality of letter patterns. Forty kindergartners and first graders were taught to read 12 words containing either single consonants…
Descriptors: Phonics, Phonology, Sight Vocabulary, Vision
Trezek, Beverly J.; Wang, Ye; Woods, Denyse G.; Gampp, Terri L.; Paul, Peter V. – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2007
The purpose of the current study is to expand upon the effectiveness of using Visual Phonics in conjunction with Direct Instruction reading programs (B. J. Trezek & K. W. Malmgren, 2005; B. J. Trezek & Y. Wang, 2006) and to explore the results of utilizing Visual Phonics to supplement another phonics-based reading curriculum for students who are…
Descriptors: Phonics, Visual Aids, Reading Programs, Instructional Effectiveness
Berghoff, Beth – Focus on Exceptional Children, 2007
Almost every first grade has at least one Peter, one youngster who delivers the important note from his mother at the end of the day instead of in the morning and yet, he is not making much progress toward learning to read and write. He has all the characteristics that mark him as being one of those children who will struggle throughout his school…
Descriptors: Literacy Education, Grade 1, Team Teaching, Reader Response
Flanigan, Kevin – Journal of Literacy Research, 2007
The purpose of this study was to examine a model of early reading acquisition that hinged on a phenomenon seldom explored in beginning reading research: a child's concept of word in text. Previous research in early literacy acquisition has centered on the role phonological awareness--the ability to consciously attend to and manipulate the sound…
Descriptors: Spelling, Speech, Reading Research, Early Reading
Horner, Sherri L.; O'Connor, Evelyn A. – Reading & Writing Quarterly, 2007
In this article, the authors explain how one of them helped a struggling reader develop reading, writing, and self-regulatory strategies. The article is based on two foundations: Marie Clay's, the developer of Reading Recovery, ideas on the self-extending system of reading and Schunk and Zimmerman's four developmental levels of self-regulation…
Descriptors: Reading Difficulties, Reading Instruction, Reading Programs, Teaching Methods
Lynch, Jacqueline – Journal of Early Childhood Literacy, 2008
This research examined the types of print literacy activities low-income parents reported engaging in with their four-year-old children. There were 38 parents of children involved in Head Start, a pre-school program for children from low-income families living in the USA, who participated in this study. Children were assessed on their knowledge…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged Youth, Preschool Children, Parent Role, Low Income Groups

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