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Chisholm, Diane; Knafle, June D. – 1975
In a partial replication of Samuels' (1972) experiments, 60 first grade pupils were assigned to a letter name group, a letter discrimination group, or a control group to investigate the effect of letter name knowledge on learning to read words. Artificial letters formulated by Gibson, et al. (1962) were used instead of those of Samuels, and…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Character Recognition, Elementary Education, Letters (Alphabet)
Hyman, Joan S.; Cohen, S. Alan – 1974
The stimulus properties of the letters b, d, p, and q were investigated in an attempt to demonstrate that the common reversal of these letters by beginning readers is in part determined by the vertical aspect of the stimulus figure. One hundred eighty kindergarteners were randomly selected from a racially mixed population and randomly assigned to…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Kindergarten Children, Letters (Alphabet), Reading
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Leong, C. K. – 1976
This paper discusses some psycholinguistic and psychological bases of learning to read in two apparently disparate writing systems, English and Chinese. As an alphabet, English orthography has "more reason than rhyme"; relational units and markers (e.g., "hens" and "hence") are important. The combinatory properties of…
Descriptors: Alphabets, Beginning Reading, Chinese, English
Katz, Ina C.; Singer, Harry – 1976
Data from four of the Cooperative First Grade Studies (1964-1965) were reanalyzed for four first grade projects, (Fry, Hayes, Mazurkiewicz, and Tanyzer). These projects were selected because they compared the Initial Teaching Alphabet approach with traditional orthography-basal reader approaches. The focal point of this reanalysis was to study the…
Descriptors: Basic Reading, Beginning Reading, Grade 1, Initial Teaching Alphabet
Liberman, Isabelle Y.; Shankweiler, Donald – 1976
The dependence of reading on speech is based on three assumptions: speech is the primary language system, acquired naturally without direct instruction; alphabetic writing systems are more or less phonetic representations of oral language; and speech appears to be an essential foundation for the acquisition of reading ability. By presupposing…
Descriptors: Alphabets, Beginning Reading, Conference Reports, Decoding (Reading)