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Cowden, Peter A. – College Student Journal, 2010
The ability to learn is an important life skill. It is a critical skill for participation in all aspects of life, including school, work, and the community. It is a major key to accessing knowledge, gaining independence, and exercising life choices. Many people believe that individuals with moderate disabilities cannot learn how to read. They…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Learning Disabilities, Phonemic Awareness, Reading Skills

Groff, Patrick – Annals of Dyslexia, 1991
First and second grade teachers (n=275) were surveyed concerning their knowledge about and attitudes toward the whole-language approach to reading instruction. Findings suggest that many teachers are not persuaded that the whole-language approach to reading instruction is to be preferred over other methods such as intensive phonics instruction or…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Knowledge Level, Primary Education, Reading Instruction
Routman, Regie – Instructor, 1992
The article describes how to teach skills strategically in whole-language classrooms. It discusses differences between skills and strategies and notes how to move from skill to strategy. A section on teaching phonics examines phonics charts and personal phonics booklets; suggests an order for teaching phonics. (SM)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Phonics, Primary Education, Reading Skills
Sensenbaugh, Roger – 1996
This digest discusses the concept of "phonemic/phonological awareness"--the awareness that spoken language is made up of discrete sounds. The digest also discusses why this concept is so important to early childhood educators, its relation to the debate on the best type of reading instruction, and teaching methods that may help children…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Elementary Education, Oral Language, Phonemic Awareness

Juel, Connie – Journal of Research in Reading, 1995
Suggests that abandoning controlled vocabulary texts on the assumption that reading is a psycholinguistic guessing game was wrong. Claims that the current emphasis on strategy instruction, scaffolded reading experiences, and the use of writing to foster letter-sounds may provide good outcomes for those teachers and children who dreaded reading…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Elementary Education, Literature Reviews, Reading Instruction
Karch, Barbara – Gifted Child Today (GCT), 1990
A kindergarten teacher recounts her classroom experience introducing children to reading via the whole language approach, which is based on the belief that children learn to read and write naturally by listening, watching, speaking, and writing. Classroom photographs and samples of student work illustrate the article. (DB)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Classroom Techniques, Kindergarten, Language Experience Approach

Weaver, Constance – Topics in Language Disorders, 1991
This paper discusses major principles characterizing the whole language philosophy of teaching and learning; assumptions of the mechanistic and relational paradigms; whole language practices such as the Shared Book Experience and Reading Recovery for helping students with reading difficulties; and the potential of whole language for developing…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Educational Principles, Reading Difficulties, Reading Instruction

Korkeamaki, Riitta-Liisa; Dreher, Mariam Jean – Language Arts, 1993
Reviews the typical approach (synthetic phonics) to teaching reading in Finland. Suggests that teachers in English-speaking countries can learn from problems Finnish teachers face and vice versa. Finds that, despite a highly regular writing system, Finnish teachers find that a heavy phonics emphasis does not solve their reading instruction…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Elementary Education, Finnish, Foreign Countries
Johnston, Jennifer – 2000
Methods used for teaching children to read could be the whole language approach, or the phonics approach, or maybe a balance of both. This paper is a discussion of appropriate and effective teaching practices through interesting methods such as music, the use of culturally diverse materials, and the role of toys and television as they relate to…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Classroom Techniques, Instructional Effectiveness, Learning Motivation

Wendon, Lyn – Early Child Development and Care, 1993
Describes LETTERLAND, a unique teaching model that blends a structured phonics approach with whole-language teaching and is widely used in British classrooms as an initial approach to literacy as well as in special needs contexts. (HTH)
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Beginning Reading, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries
Yatvin, Joanne – Northwest Education, 1998
A successful reading program is a broad-based personalized program that recognizes that reading is a mixture of various skills: phonemic awareness, grapho-phonemic correspondence, word analysis and synthesis, sight-word vocabulary, syntactic knowledge, semantic knowledge, and literary knowledge. Changes in instructional techniques are made based…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Early Childhood Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Phonics
Simner, Marvin L. – 1993
Many Canadians are concerned about the quality of reading instruction in Canadian schools. Recent newspaper articles, research reviews, and newsletter articles reflect the nature of these concerns. The official instructional policy in a number of provinces as well as in a number of local school districts is based on a whole-language philosophy.…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Foreign Countries, Instructional Effectiveness, Language Arts

Nicholson, Tom – International Journal of Disability, Development and Education, 1992
The debate among major theorists of the whole-language approach (Kenneth Goodman and Frank Smith) and their critics (e.g., Philip Gough) is summarized. It concludes that the Goodman/Smith theoretical position has not stood the test of time, though some of their instructional recommendations may be valid for other reasons. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Theories

Lamb, G. – Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, 1996
This article describes the whole-language philosophy of teaching reading and writing and its application to teaching braille reading to blind children. It suggests activities that are effective for enhancing the development of early reading behaviors in children who use braille and that integrate the critical components of literacy learning with…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Blindness, Braille, Elementary Education
Christensen, K. Eleanor – 1990
Whole language represents only one of many good concepts about teaching reading to children, but it is not for everybody. Because whole language is a philosophy rather than a specific method, educational practitioners can incorporate different aspects of this philosophy to different degrees. If teachers think of a continuum of theoretical bases…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Classroom Environment, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Education