Descriptor
Exceptional Child Research | 4 |
Paired Associate Learning | 4 |
Word Recognition | 4 |
Mental Retardation | 3 |
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Teaching Methods | 2 |
Adolescents | 1 |
Age Differences | 1 |
Association (Psychology) | 1 |
Associative Learning | 1 |
Autoinstructional Aids | 1 |
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Parmenter, Trevor R. | 2 |
Dorry, George W. | 1 |
MacGinitie, Walter H., Ed. | 1 |
Rosenstein, Joseph, Ed. | 1 |
Zeaman, David | 1 |
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Dorry, George W.; Zeaman, David – Mental Retardation, 1973
Descriptors: Exceptional Child Research, Mental Retardation, Paired Associate Learning, Teaching Methods
Parmenter, Trevor R.; And Others – 1978
The paper reports on an Australian study comparing two methods of teaching a word recognition reading task to eight mildly retarded adolescents. One method involved incidental learning, while the other involved a more structured paired-associate approach. It was found that all eight Ss learned a short list of tool names equally well under either…
Descriptors: Exceptional Child Research, Foreign Countries, Incidental Learning, Mental Retardation
Rosenstein, Joseph, Ed.; MacGinitie, Walter H., Ed. – 1969
Results are reported of five studies of word meanings and associations of the deaf child. Subjects from two oral schools for the deaf and a group of normally hearing students were given a word association test. The generally higher same form class responses of subjects from oral school B were thought to reflect their language instruction which…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Association (Psychology), Associative Learning, Exceptional Child Research
Parmenter, Trevor R.; And Others – Australian Journal of Mental Retardation, 1979
A group of eight mildly intellectually handicapped adolescents at a work preparation center were taught to read two lists of words of equal difficulty by different methods--using an autoinstructional device (a 3M sound-on-slide projector) and a more traditional paired-associate method. (Author/SBH)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Autoinstructional Aids, Exceptional Child Research, Mental Retardation