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Smith, Frank – 1995
Reflecting important issues in the lives of educators, the contents of the nine essays in this book range from hope for the almost unlimited potential of the human brain for learning and thinking, particularly through language and literacy, to despair at the individual and social damage caused by efforts to systematize teaching and learning in…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Language Role, Learning Processes, Literacy

Smith, Frank – Harvard Educational Review, 1977
Author claims that the essential antecedents of reading consist of two cognitive insights: that written language is meaningful and that written language is different from spoken language. He argues that current instructional practices may hinder the learning of these insights and suggests ways in which parents and teachers may help children to…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, Persuasive Discourse, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
Smith, Frank – 1985
Intended for reading teachers, this book is concerned with the process of reading, with the perceptual and language skills involved in reading, and with the nature of the task confronting children learning to read. It shows that it is only through reading that children learn to read, and that a teacher's role must therefore be to make reading easy…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Reading Comprehension, Reading Diagnosis, Reading Difficulties

Smith, Frank – Language Arts, 1983
Argues that the specialized knowledge that writing demands can only be acquired through a particular kind of reading. Illustrates how this kind of reading occurs and considers ways teachers can facilitate such learning. (JL)
Descriptors: Child Language, Educational Environment, Elementary Education, Language Acquisition