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Showing 1 to 15 of 31 results Save | Export
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Tori Virlee; Erin Hardin; Chelsea McKinlay – Montessori Life: A Publication of the American Montessori Society, 2024
In our first article, we outlined some of the reasons for reading failure at the Early Childhood level and beyond, discussed common challenges students face, and explored essential components for quality reading instruction. We'll revisit the students you met in the first article to provide a window into how the Science of Reading can be…
Descriptors: Montessori Method, Reading Research, Reading Instruction, Faculty Development
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Piasta, Shayne B.; Hudson, Alida K. – Reading Teacher, 2022
Phonological awareness and phonics instruction are necessary components of beginning reading instruction and require teachers to have specialized content, pedagogical, and pedagogical content knowledge. This includes knowledge about language structures; reading components, processes, and development; and effective instructional practices. In this…
Descriptors: Phonological Awareness, Phonics, Beginning Reading, Reading Instruction
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Rawlins, Amanda; Invernizzi, Marcia – Reading Teacher, 2019
Sight word learning occurs in most early elementary classrooms. Some kindergarten students face the prospect of learning up to 100 sight words, and many teachers feel pressure to ensure that students know lists of words by the year's end. The authors offer five assertions about sight word learning to direct teachers and administrators toward the…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Beginning Reading, Vocabulary Development, Kindergarten
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Bloome, David; Kim, Minjeong – Prospects: Quarterly Review of Comparative Education, 2016
The argument here is that learning to read for young people in school is not a monolithic process but, rather, consists of multiple and differentiated pathways involving the acquisition of diverse reading practices and cultural ideologies embedded in a broad range of social and cultural contexts. Such a view of learning to read entails…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Reading Instruction, Beginning Reading, Reading Processes
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Wohlwend, Karen E. – Language Arts, 2012
This article introduces a way of seeing miscue analysis data through a "spider chart", a readily available digital graphing tool that provides an effective way to visually represent readers' complex coordination of interrelated cueing systems. A spider chart is a standard feature in recent spreadsheet software that puts a new spin on miscue…
Descriptors: Miscue Analysis, Reading Processes, Cues, Charts
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Smith, Frank; Goodman, Kenneth S. – Language Arts, 2008
Ken Goodman and Frank Smith met for the first time in 1970, though they had each been studying and writing, separately, about the reading process for several years prior to that. They commemorated the occasion by collaborating on an article, On the Psycholinguistic Method of Teaching Reading which appeared soon after in The Elementary School…
Descriptors: Reading Research, Psycholinguistics, Reading, Reading Processes
Noble, Jo Anne – Council Connections, 2000
To adult readers directional movement seems natural, because adults have mastered this aspect of the reading process, and it is quite automatic. For some children, directional behavior can be very complex. Such was the case for one bright little boy ("Chance") the author/educator served in Reading Recovery. This article tells the story…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Case Studies, Literacy, Primary Education
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Hood, Wendy J. – Primary Voices K-6, 1995
Discusses a primary classroom in which the teacher uses miscue analysis, print awareness tasks, and book handling analysis to get to know her kids as readers and to build her instructional program. Describes using reading strategy groups made by grouping together students with similar strengths. Appends a description of how to administer the Book…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Miscue Analysis, Primary Education, Reading Instruction
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Brummett, Bill; Maras, Lisa Burley – Primary Voices K-6, 1995
Discusses how miscue analysis informs two teachers' daily interactions with middle-grade students: how their teaching is transformed, how the structure of the day is changed, how they use reading conferences, and lessons from children. Appends a reading interview form, a record sheet for audio tapes, and a description of a strategy lesson on…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Intermediate Grades, Miscue Analysis, Reading Instruction
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Steinman, Bernard A.; LeJeune, B. J.; Kimbrough, B. T. – Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, 2006
This article compares the development of print and braille reading in children who are blind and sighted in relation to Chall's stage model of reading development. Chall's model includes a prereading period, in which concepts are developed; middle stages, in which skills that are necessary for decoding text are developed; and later stages, which…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, Reading Achievement, Developmental Stages, Reading Processes
Partridge, Susan – 1992
Two Schools of thought prominent in reading instruction are: (1) that reading is a language-based skill which requires the reader to have a sound knowledge of phonology and that this knowledge must be at an automatic level of information processing; and (2) that reading problems are the result of being overly attentive to phonetic and orthographic…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Phonemic Awareness, Phonetics, Primary Education
Goodman, Kenneth S.; Goodman, Yetta M. – 1981
Intended for reading teachers and school administrators, this paper proposes a whole language, comprehension based approach to reading instruction that is rooted in the humanistic acceptance of the learner as problem solver and that builds on strengths and minimizes preoccupation with reading deficiency. Following an introduction and rationale for…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Elementary Education, Holistic Evaluation, Program Descriptions
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Skjelfjord, Vebjorn Jentoft – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 1987
Five subskills in learning to read are identified, and their place in the methods of teaching reading and their relations to each other are discussed. It is concluded that phonemic segmentation must be the most important and the most difficult task in learning to read. (Author/LMO)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Early Childhood Education, Foreign Countries, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
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Preen, Bryan S.; Townsend, Diana O. – Reading and Writing Quarterly: Overcoming Learning Difficulties, 1993
Suggests that "Johnny can't read" because of high testosterone levels in fetal development and subsequent poor brain lateralization. Presents instructional strategies based on the principle of factorized teaching for each of three discrete lateralization categories. Notes that the use of factorized teaching appears to have improved diagnostic and…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Elementary Education, Instructional Effectiveness
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Crowell, Caryl G. – Primary Voices K-6, 1995
Discusses how the author, a second-/third-grade bilingual teacher, uses miscue analysis to plan reading strategy instruction that meets each individual child's needs by building on each one's strengths as a reader, in both their first and second languages. Appends a description of buddy reading. (SR)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Bilingual Education, Bilingual Students, Miscue Analysis
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