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Emily Corinne Saunders – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Prelingually and profoundly deaf individuals learn to read without complete access to the sounds of language. Nevertheless, many become proficient readers, and the neurocognitive underpinnings of deaf readers' processes differ from those of hearing readers, particularly in orthographic processing. In English, morphological structure is relatively…
Descriptors: Deafness, Morphology (Languages), Reading Processes, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Michele Timmons – ProQuest LLC, 2021
The vocabulary deficit shown by English Learners (ELs) has become evident among many educators over decades of research (Becker, 1977; Biemiller, 2001; Chall, Jacobs, & Baldwin, 1990; Hart & Riseley, 2003), and has shown that a student's limited vocabulary becomes a "major barrier to school success" (Graves, 2005, p. 18).…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Reading Strategies, Reading Comprehension, English Learners
Sowers-Wills, Sara – ProQuest LLC, 2017
Child language data are notoriously noisy. Children may produce several phonetic variants for a given word or use the same forms for several different words. As such, child data are characterized by little apparent systematicity. Competing theories have arisen to account for a range of problematic phenomena, but each has struggled to relate child…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Phonology, Schemata (Cognition)