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Peer reviewedWilliams, Joanna P. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1980
The ABDs of Reading program provides explicit training in phoneme analysis and phoneme blending, letter-sound correspondences, and decoding to learning disabled children. No extensive teacher-training, teacher-aids, or other unusual classroom support is required. (Author/CP)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Curriculum Development, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education
Landercy, Albert – Revue de Phonetique Appliquee, 1976
This article discusses the relationship in language instruction between the verbo-tonal system of phonetic correction and a structuro-global audio-visual method which takes the communication aspects of language learning into account. (Text is in French.) (CLK)
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Audiovisual Aids, Auditory Perception, Error Patterns
Peer reviewedHoien, Torleiv; And Others – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 1995
Examines the factorial structure underlying different task types within the domain of phonological awareness. Tests, in study 1, 128 preschoolers without formal reading instruction, giving them tasks in rhyme recognition, syllable counting, initial phoneme matching and deletion, phoneme blending, and phoneme counting. Replicates structural…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Factor Analysis, Grade 1, Multiple Regression Analysis
Peer reviewedSparks, Richard L. – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 1995
States that children with hyperlexia who learn to read spontaneously before age five are impaired in reading and listening comprehension but have word recognition skills well above their measured cognitive and linguistic abilities. Administers phonemic awareness measures to three early readers. Finds that all three children's phonemic awareness…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Early Reading, Phonemic Awareness, Primary Education
Peer reviewedFielding-Barnsley, Ruth – Scientific Studies of Reading, 1997
Notes that 32 preschool children were trained to a high level in phonemic awareness over a 12-week period, and then in kindergarten, the children were taught 10 real words using either decoding and encoding techniques or a whole word method. Finds that children taught decoding and encoding techniques were superior in reading and writing compared…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Early Childhood Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Kindergarten
Peer reviewedMurray, Bruce A.; Smith, Kimberly A.; Murray, Geralyn G. – Journal of Literacy Research, 2000
Tests the validity of the Test of Phoneme Identities (TPI). Finds the TPI to be reliable and comparable to other phoneme awareness measures in predicting decoding ability; and to be more effective than a nursery rhyme and alphabet measures in predicting the number of lessons required for a student to learn to distinguish phonetic cues. (RS)
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Evaluation Methods, Kindergarten, Phonemes
Peer reviewedCole, Peter G.; Mengler, Elise D. – Reading Psychology, 1994
Finds that children with learning disabilities performed significantly worse on only the first level of phonemic awareness compared to younger children of average reading ability at the same reading age level and significantly worse on compound phonemic awareness compared to a control group. Explicates implications for diagnosis and remediation of…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Language Processing, Phonemic Awareness, Primary Education
Peer reviewedBowey, Judith A. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1994
Study examined whether phonemic sensitivity is limited to alphabetically literate individuals. Children not exposed to reading instruction were given pairs of phonological sensitivity tasks. Novice readers scored higher in phonological sensitivity than nonreaders of equivalent letter knowledge, when controlled for verbal ability; among nonreaders,…
Descriptors: Early Reading, Foreign Countries, Letters (Alphabet), Phonemic Awareness
Peer reviewedTreiman, Rebecca – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1991
Spelling errors made by children on initial consonant clusters of words were studied in 5 experiments with 130 first graders and 20 kindergartners. Young spellers have frequent problems with initial consonant clusters. Results suggest that difficulties in phonemic awareness lead to corresponding spelling difficulties. (SLD)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Error Patterns, Grade 1, Individual Differences
Peer reviewedElbert, Mary – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 1992
This response to Fey (EC 604 058) discusses the use of the term "phonological" to describe disordered speech patterns and suggests that phonological disorders include both phonetic and phonemic error types. Describing errors as either phonetic or phonemic is seen to lead to differential treatment procedures. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Articulation Impairments, Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, Opinions
Peer reviewedDixon, Robert C. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1991
Three curricular approaches to spelling instruction are discussed: whole word; phonemic; and morphemic. Sameness analysis is used to indicate the theoretical potential of each approach for helping students with learning disabilities to achieve generalization in their spelling, and the influence of generalization upon retention and transfer is…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Elementary Secondary Education, Generalization, Learning Disabilities
Peer reviewedTurner, Joy – Montessori Life, 1998
Discusses implications for Montessori Teachers of research findings relating children's phonological awareness and reading skills. Notes the importance of using a rich prereading background with manageable and multisensory alphabetic instruction and oral-language games to prepare children to read. Maintains that word-play games provide early,…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Early Childhood Education, Educational Games, Emergent Literacy
Peer reviewedSparks, Richard L. – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2001
Considers how children with hyperlexia who learn to read spontaneously before the age of five are impaired in reading and listening comprehension but have word recognition skills well above their measured cognitive and linguistic abilities. Reevaluates three adolescent hyperlexic students eight years after an initial evaluation. Finds levels of…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Elementary Secondary Education, Longitudinal Studies, Phonemic Awareness
Peer reviewedMoats, Louisa C. – Educational Leadership, 2001
Researchers agree that a core linguistic deficit underlies poor reading at all ages; poor readers generally exhibit weaknesses in phonological processing and word-recognition speed and accuracy. Reading intervention grounded in research imparts to older readers the skills missed in primary grades and can bring them to grade level in 1 or 2 years.…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, Intervention, Phonemics
Peer reviewedChristiansen, Morten H.; Allen, Joseph; Seidenberg, Mark S. – Language and Cognitive Processes, 1998
Describes a connectionist model, using a simple recurrent network trained on a phoneme prediction task, that accounts for the child's ability to identify word boundaries. The model shows that aspects of linguistic structure that are not overtly marked in the input can be derived by efficiently combining multiple probabilistic cues. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Processing, Language Research


