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Conners, Frances A.; Carr, Michael D.; Willis, Sandra – American Journal on Mental Retardation, 1998
Thirty children with mild mental retardation were compared with 30 children of the same age and 26 children matched for verbal age without mental retardation on a forward digit span task. The highly significant group difference was reduced to nonsignificance when a measure of central executive functioning was covaried out. (Author/CR)
Descriptors: Analysis of Covariance, Beginning Reading, Children, Cognitive Ability

Wagstaff, Janiel M. – Reading Teacher, 1998
Describes how one kindergarten teacher developed self-monitoring and searching behaviors in her class of beginning readers. Describes an array of reading and writing activities that advanced students' phonemic awareness, letter-sound knowledge, and facility with reading and writing--learning that was proudly constructed with ownership shared…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Childrens Writing, Emergent Literacy, Kindergarten
Cunningham, Patricia – Instructor (Primary), 1998
Presents phonic activities based on brand names for teaching primary students basic reading. The first uses familiar brand-name products with rhyming elements in their names. The second has teachers write longer words that rhyme with and have similar spelling patterns to product names. Both activities help students use patterns in familiar words…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Creative Teaching, Decoding (Reading), Elementary School Students

Stage, Scott A.; Sheppard, Jodi; Davidson, Marcia M.; Browning, Mary M. – Journal of School Psychology, 2001
Study examines first-grade students' growth in oral reading fluency as predicted by their kindergarten letter-naming and letter-sound fluency using growth curve analysis. Results reveal that kindergarten letter-naming fluency uniquely contributed to the prediction of first-grade reading growth. Findings also reveal that Native American and…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Grade 1, Hispanic Americans, Kindergarten

Allor, Jill Howard; Fuchs, Douglas; Mathes, Patricia G. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2001
A study compared the effectiveness of phonemic awareness and decoding training for 58 first graders with and without severe lexical retrieval weaknesses. All students demonstrated poor phonemic awareness. Students with relatively strong lexical retrieval skills responded more favorably to beginning reading instruction than did students with weak…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Decoding (Reading), Educational Strategies, Elementary Education

Duke, Nell K. – American Educational Research Journal, 2000
Studied differences in the print environment offered children in 20 first-grade classrooms of very low or very high socioeconomic status. Site visits show substantial differences between the two groups, with lower amount, type, and uses of print in the lower socioeconomic status classrooms. Meaningful differences in literacy instruction were…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Disadvantaged Youth, Elementary School Students, Literacy Education

McComiskey, A. V. – Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, 1996
The Braille Readiness Skills Grid identifies activities and skills that foster braille readiness in children with visual impairments. The grid assesses five readiness areas: tactile, fine motor, listening/attention, concept, and book/story. It is intended to encourage systematic braille readiness activities from infancy and foster children's…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Beginning Reading, Blindness, Braille

Bond, Carole L.; And Others – Reading Research and Instruction, 1996
Finds that the program was somewhat more effective than the traditional (basal) curriculum for teaching word attack and letter-word identification, especially for students in low socioeconomic schools in a metropolitan school district, but that the program was not more effective than the conventional curriculum for more complex language skills…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Primary Education, Program Effectiveness, Reading Achievement

O'Connor, Rollanda E.; And Others – Exceptional Children, 1996
Kindergartners with disabilities (n=31), without disabilities (n=57), and children repeating kindergarten (n=19) were studied to compare the effects of an activity-based phonological instruction. Results indicate that teachers can improve the phonological skills of their students prior to formal reading instruction and that instruction to children…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Disabilities, Early Intervention, Instructional Effectiveness

Jordan, Gail E.; Snow, Catherine E.; Porche, Michelle V. – Reading Research Quarterly, 2000
Investigates effectiveness of the Project Early Access to Success in Education, which includes parent education sessions on assisting their children's developing literacy abilities, at-school parent/child activities, and at-home book-mediated activities. Finds improvement in language skills, with a strong impact on the children who scored low at…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Emergent Literacy, Family Literacy, Kindergarten

Chapman, James W.; Tunmer, William E.; Prochnow, Jane E. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2000
Examines relations between academic self-concept (ASC) and measures of reading-related performance and self-concept in 60 beginning school children who were assessed as having positive, negative, or typical ASCs. Data reveals that children with negative ASCs performed poorly on reading-related tasks and reported more negative reading self-concepts…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Beginning Reading, Foreign Countries, Longitudinal Studies

Marvin, Christine A.; Ogden, Nancy J. – Young Exceptional Children, 2002
This article discusses home/family factors related to the development of emergent literacy skills in preschool-age children and presents the Home Literacy Inventory for assessing children's non-print activities, reading activities, writing activities, and current reading and writing abilities. How the information can be used to develop…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Beginning Writing, Disabilities, Early Childhood Education

Geva, Esther; Siegel, Linda S. – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2000
Considers whether the development of reading skills in different orthographies varies primarily as a function of common underlying cognitive processes, or as a function of orthographic transparency. Concludes that when the script is less complex young children appear to develop their word recognition skills with relative ease, even in the absence…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Cognitive Processes, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education

Linebarger, Deborah L. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2001
Investigated caption use, sound, and reading behavior of 76 children who had just completed 2nd grade. The present study indicated that beginning readers recognize more words when they view television that uses captions. Captions, by evoking efforts to read, appeared to help a child focus on central story elements and away from distracting…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Captions, Comprehension, Elementary Education
Goswami, Usha; Ziegler, Johannes C.; Richardson, Ulla – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2005
Within alphabetic languages, spelling-to-sound consistency can differ dramatically. For example, English and German are very similar in their phonological and orthographic structure but not in their consistency. In English the letter "a" is pronounced differently in the words "bank," "ball," and "park,"…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, German, Reading Instruction, Phonology