ERIC Number: ED316833
Record Type: Non-Journal
Publication Date: 1990
Pages: 136
Abstractor: N/A
ISBN: ISBN-0-87207-534-6
ISSN: N/A
EISSN: N/A
Available Date: N/A
How Children Construct Literacy: Piagetian Perspectives.
Goodman, Yetta M., Ed.
Designed to contribute toward providing opportunities for young children to enlist their own powerful intelligence in the construction of their understanding of reading and writing, this book is a collection of six studies presented at the International Reading Association's Eleventh World Congress. An introductory chapter, "Discovering Children's Inventions of Written Language" (Yetta M. Goodman), discusses the prehistory and history of Piagetian studies and presents an overview of the chapters. Other chapters include: (1) "Literacy Development: Psychogenesis" (Emilia Ferreiro); (2) "Literacy Development and Pedagogical Implications: Evidence from the Hebrew System of Writing" (Liliana Tolchinsky Landsmann): (3) "The Language Young Children Write: Reflections on a Learning Situation" (Ana Teberosky); (4) "A Passage to Literacy: Learning in a Social Context" (Clotilde Pontecorvo and Cristina Zucchermaglio); (5) "Applying Psychogenesis Principles to the Literacy Instruction of Lower-Class Children in Brazil" (Esther Pillar Grossi); and (6) "Children's Knowledge about Literacy Development: An Afterword" (Yetta M. Goodman). (Four pages of references are attached.) (RS)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Beginning Writing, Cognitive Development, Emergent Literacy, Foreign Countries, Piagetian Theory, Primary Education, Reading Research, Reading Writing Relationship
International Reading Association, 800 Barksdale Rd., P.O. Box 8139, Newark, DE 19714-8139 (Book No. 534; $6.00 member, $9.00 nonmember).
Publication Type: Books; Reports - Research
Education Level: N/A
Audience: N/A
Language: English
Sponsor: N/A
Authoring Institution: International Reading Association, Newark, DE.
Identifiers - Location: Brazil; Italy; Mexico; Spain
Grant or Contract Numbers: N/A
Author Affiliations: N/A