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McCormick, Sandra – Reading Horizons, 1983
Reviews research showing the positive effects of reading aloud to preschool children in the areas of language development, reading interests, reading and academic readiness, and social attitudes. (FL)
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Parent Role, Prereading Experience, Preschool Children
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Gentile, Lance M.; Hoot, James L. – Reading Teacher, 1983
Discusses the critical relationships among play, learning to read, and early reading achievement. Gives examples of kindergarten play activities that nurture the ability to read, including painting, playing with lettered blocks, movement activities, sociodramatic play, and field trips. (FL)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Beginning Reading, Dramatic Play, Field Trips
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Graden, Ellen Collie – Foreign Language Annals, 1996
Examined secondary school teachers' (n=6) beliefs about effective second-language reading instruction. All teachers believed reading proficiency is facilitated by providing students with frequent opportunities for reading practice, use of the target language is preferable for reading instruction, and oral reading interferes with comprehension, but…
Descriptors: Language Proficiency, Language Teachers, Reading Achievement, Reading Aloud to Others
Genisio, Margaret Humadi – Early Childhood News, 1996
Explores how the emerging literacy stage emphasizes the child's primary role in his or her individual progression in becoming literate. Provides guidance to teachers and parents to promote a child's language experimentation by emphasizing a supportive environment and enhancing natural learning by encouraging reading to children, self-directed…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Developmental Stages, Early Childhood Education, Emergent Literacy
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Amer, Aly A. – ELT Journal, 1997
Using a multiple-choice test and a story frame test, this study measured the effect on reading comprehension of reading a story aloud to English-as-a-Second-Language students. Findings indicate that these students outperformed on both tests those students who read the story silently. (Six references) (Author/CK)
Descriptors: Control Groups, Elementary School Students, English (Second Language), Experimental Groups
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Holmes, Kerry – Childhood Education, 2003
This article describes how a first-grade teacher used poetry to provide students of diverse ability levels with reading and language activities that stimulated their interest and improved basic skills. Activities with poetry included reading the poems aloud individually and as a group, discussing and analyzing the poems' words and meanings, and…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Grade 1, Grade Repetition, Journal Writing
Padgett, Ron – Teachers and Writers, 1990
Discusses subvocalization and other ways in which people read silently. Comments on authorial voice and offers ways to experiment with creative reading aloud. Notes how the proliferation of advertising, the media "explosion," and the influence of modernism in literature has changed the fundamental sense of what reading is and how to do…
Descriptors: Inner Speech (Subvocal), Listening Skills, Oral Reading, Reading Aloud to Others
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Bartelo, Dennise M. – Reading Improvement, 1990
Investigates how children represent meaning in their response to stories through listening, speaking, reading, drawing, and writing. Finds no one particular language process to be exclusively used by children to convey meaning in response to story. Discovers sequential and simultaneous linkage patterns of language process modality. (KEH)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Freehand Drawing, Grade 1, Illustrations
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Strickland, Dorothy S.; Morrow, Lesley Mandel – Reading Teacher, 1990
Offers several suggestions for activities to be used with Big Books, including: tracking print, thinking along, cloze activities, and examining text features. (MG)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Class Activities, Cloze Procedure, Elementary Education
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Strickland, Dorothy S.; Morrow, Lesley Mandel – Reading Teacher, 1990
Encourages teachers to share appropriate information about books and reading with parents in order to influence storybook reading in their students' homes. (MG)
Descriptors: Books, Childrens Literature, Early Childhood Education, Family Literacy
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Robson, Cliff; Whitley, Steve – Reading, 1989
Examines the influence of a regular book borrowing service designed to enable and encourage parents to read to their children. Finds no statistically significant difference between control and experimental groups on a reading test, but finds an unexpectedly high level of parental interest. (RS)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Early Reading, Emergent Literacy, Foreign Countries
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Kook, Hetty; Vedder, Paul – International Journal of Early Years Education, 1995
Describes parent-child activities during storybook reading, suggesting that interactive reading (constructing meaning) is more developmentally enriching than attending to story. Found that Curacaoan mothers were more concerned with child's understanding of story than with constructing meaning. Argues that parents should be trained in dialog that…
Descriptors: Child Development, Foreign Countries, Kindergarten Children, Parent Child Relationship
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Bus, Adriana G.; And Others – Review of Educational Research, 1995
Results of a quantitative analysis of empirical evidence related to parent-preschooler reading support the hypothesis that parent-preschooler reading is related to outcome measures such as language growth, emergent literacy, and reading achievement. Book reading apparently affects acquisition of the written language register. (SLD)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Children, Emergent Literacy, Language Acquisition
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Spreadbury, Julie – Australian Journal of Early Childhood, 1995
Examined the reasons parents read to their children using interviews from 25 Brisbane parents. Reasons given for reading aloud to their children were categorized under the following five main headings: pleasure for the child, functionality, good start at school, closeness, and quiet time. Concludes with a discussion of the practical implications…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Family Environment, Family Involvement, Foreign Countries
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Schine, Joan; Bianco, Diana – Children Today, 1992
Describes a program that encourages the love of reading, and develops the reading skills of early adolescents, preschoolers, and elementary school students. The adolescents read aloud to the younger children from children's books, discuss the readings with the children, and help the children understand the books. (SM)
Descriptors: Books, Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
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