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Havelka, Jelena; Rastle, Kathleen – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
The Serbian writing system was used to investigate whether a serial procedure is implicated in print-to-sound translation and whether components of the reading aloud system can be strategically controlled. In mixed- and pure-alphabet lists, participants read aloud phonologically bivalent words comprising bivalent letters in initial or final…
Descriptors: Written Language, Phonology, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Serbocroatian
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Ellis, Nick C.; Natsume, Miwa; Stavropoulou, Katerina; Hoxhallari, Lorenc; Van Daal, Victor H.P.; Polyzoe, Nicoletta; Tsipa, Maria-Louisa; Petalas, Michalis – Reading Research Quarterly, 2004
This study investigated the effects of orthographic depth on reading acquisition in alphabetic, syllabic, and logographic scripts. Children between 6 and 15 years old read aloud in transparent syllabic Japanese hiragana, alphabets of increasing orthographic depth (Albanian, Greek, English), and orthographically opaque Japanese kanji ideograms,…
Descriptors: Indo European Languages, Word Frequency, Written Language, Alphabets
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Rieben, Laurence; Ntamakiliro, Ladislas; Gonthier, Brana; Fayol, Michel – Scientific Studies of Reading, 2005
The effects of different early word spelling practices on reading and spelling were studied in 145 five-year-old children. Three experimental treatments were designed to mimic different teaching activities by having children practice invented spelling (IS group), copied spelling (CS group), or invented spelling with feedback on correct orthography…
Descriptors: Spelling Instruction, Invented Spelling, Teaching Methods, Feedback
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Brice, Roanne G. – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2004
Written language requires prior knowledge of many foundation language skills. Students with language learning disabilities find it difficult to integrate language skills into academic writing assignments. Exceptional educators can teach foundation writing skills through certain underlying components of language, that is, phonology, morphology,…
Descriptors: Prior Learning, Written Language, Writing Skills, Syntax
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Kim, Jeesun; Davis, Chris; Burnham, Denis; Luksaneeyanawin, Sudaporn – Brain and Language, 2004
The current research examined performance of good and poor readers of Thai on two tasks that assess sensitivity to dynamic visual displays. Readers of Thai, a complex alphabetic script that nonetheless has a regular orthography, were chosen in order to contrast patterns of performance with readers of Korean Hangul (a similarly regular language but…
Descriptors: Written Language, Visual Stimuli, Thai, Reading Skills
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Goodman, Ken – Journal of Literacy Research, 2005
In this article, the author, a Oscar Causey award winner, examines the major concepts that have characterized his 40-year career in literacy research. He describes how his understanding of these concepts developed, and particularly who and what influenced his work and how he used these influences. A summary of his current understandings and…
Descriptors: Written Language, Literacy, Miscue Analysis, Reading Fluency
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Halliday, Lorna F.; Bishop, Dorothy V. M. – Journal of Research in Reading, 2006
A popular hypothesis holds that developmental dyslexia is caused by phonological processing problems and is therefore linked to difficulties in the analysis of spoken as well as written language. It has been suggested that these phonological deficits might be attributable to low-level problems in processing the temporal fine structure of auditory…
Descriptors: Written Language, Speech Communication, Cues, Comprehension
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Kim, Sungbum; Oah, Shezeen; Dickinson, Alyce M. – Environment and Behavior, 2005
The effectiveness of posted feedback on recycling in a lounge area at a South Korean university was studied. Participants were college students, professors, and staff members. The dependent variables were the percentage and number of correctly separated aluminum cans, the percentage and number of correctly separated paper cups, and the weight of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Recycling, Feedback, Written Language
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Zhao, Shouhui – Current Issues in Language Planning, 2005
After a century of effort, directed at modernising Chinese script, it is still the case that Chinese characters (henceforth "hanzi") remain a deficient communication system both for human use and for mechanical application. In some respects, the reform of Chinese "hanzi" has been a very political process, driven ultimately by…
Descriptors: Language Planning, Romanization, Ideology, Mandarin Chinese
Peterson, Nancy – Instructor, 2006
With persistence and an enthusiastic approach, teachers can lead their students to discover writing as a creative outlet and a communication tool, a way of transmitting the scenes inside their heads to the world at large. Written language, with all its conventions and complexities, of course takes years to master. But it must have a beginning.…
Descriptors: Written Language, Creative Thinking, Writing Instruction, Mentors
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Van Sluys, Katie; Laman, Tasha Tropp – Reading Teacher, 2006
Many approaches to literacy instruction treat language as an object of study. The curricular assumptions that inform such instruction are that language is located outside the person, extracted from context, neutral, and explicable through defined rules. An underlying assumption in many language arts classrooms is that children will not pay…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Written Language, Literacy Education, Language Arts
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Noell, George H.; Connell, James E.; Duhon, Gary J. – Journal of Behavioral Education, 2006
The bulk of the existing literature emphasizes the use of phonemic/phonetic based instruction to enhance generalization between reading and written language. However, phonetically irregular words are common in English and may require the use of whole word approaches. This study examined generalization between from reading to spelling and from…
Descriptors: Written Language, Generalization, Spelling Instruction, Models
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Spack, Ruth – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2006
In this article, the author examines Zitkala-Sa's translation of an Indian legend from Dakota into English. Her title, "Translation Moves," refers not only to Zitkala-Sa's rhetorical strategies, but also to different meanings of translation, as well as to the complex and dynamic process that translation entails. There is literal translation: the…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, American Indians, Translation, American Indian Culture
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Ware, Paige D. – Language Arts, 2006
This paper presents two nine-year-old children who used different oral, written, visual, and digital modes as resources to create meaning and to position themselves socially through multimodal stories. Their diverging experiences with technology as a resource for storytelling draw attention to the importance of studying "the ways that old and new…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Story Telling, Oral Language, Written Language
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Diane C. Lillo-Martin; And Others – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1992
Testing of deaf readers' comprehension of relative clause structures in written English, signed English, and American Sign Language suggests that a specific syntactic disability does not differentiate good from poor deaf readers, but rather a processing deficit may underlie poor readers' comprehension difficulties. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Deafness, English, Phrase Structure
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