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Kolodziej, Nancy J.; Columba, Lynn – Reading Improvement, 2005
Teachers are often confronted with parents' concern of their children's use of invented spelling. Research has found that if educators inform parents of the positive benefits associated with invented spelling, their attitudes towards its use will become more favorable. Consequently, these favorable attitudes will encourage parents to be more…
Descriptors: Guidelines, Academic Achievement, Invented Spelling, Parent Attitudes
Brasacchio, Tiffany; Kuhn, Bonnie; Martin, Stephanie – 2001
A study determined the impact encouragement of invented spelling has on a child's writing through a comparison of writing samples produced by children encouraged to use invented spelling with writing samples by children encouraged to use conventional spelling. Three first grade classes participated in this study, two of which are located in…
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Comparative Analysis, Grade 1, Instructional Effectiveness
Miels, Jill – Indiana Reading Journal, 1998
Discusses 10 often-asked questions regarding writing and young children, synthesizing current research on developmental writing stages, information from experienced classroom teachers, and observations from a variety of early childhood settings. (SR)
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Emergent Literacy, Invented Spelling, Journal Writing

Sipe, Lawrence R. – Reading Teacher, 2001
Highlights the teacher's critical role in spelling instruction and provides examples of how to support spelling development in classrooms. Argues that educators need to look closely at children's emerging capacities as writers, focusing especially on the issue of invented spelling, and its use and misuse in classroom practices. (SG)
Descriptors: Invented Spelling, Primary Education, Reading Improvement, Spelling Instruction
Carrington, Victoria – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2005
This paper begins with the author's recent participation in an Australian radio interview on the topic of SMS txting. It takes this as an entry point for an analysis and discussion of the discourses around txting to be found in a series of newspaper articles and taken up in the radio interview. Moving on from the initial analysis, the paper…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, English, Grammar, Discourse Analysis
Miller, Edward – Harvard Education Letter, 1996
Of all the developments in reading research during the past 30 years, few have provided as much fodder for the wars over whole language as "invented spelling." Research on invented spelling led to a developmental theory of how children experiment with phonemic rules and patterns, and scholars urged teachers to allow children to spell…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Elementary Education, Invented Spelling, Phonics

Rubin, Hyla; Eberhardt, Nancy C. – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 1996
Declares that invented spelling ability reflects young children's developing awareness of the internal structure of words. Examines effects of an instructional approach that emphasized integration of language analysis teaching into the whole-language kindergarten curriculum. Finds that children who received instruction were representing all the…
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Instructional Effectiveness, Invented Spelling, Kindergarten

Gelet, Isabelle Montesinos – Canadian Journal of Infancy and Early Childhood, 2002
This study used a pluralistic model to examine the procedures used by two preschoolers to achieve written productions using invented orthographies. The model allows children's procedural variations to be taken into consideration by understanding the hierarchy of different processing modes available to children in completing the task and…
Descriptors: Child Development, Childrens Writing, Developmental Stages, Invented Spelling

Griffith, Priscilla L.; Leavell, Judy A. – Childhood Education, 1996
Discusses children's use of invented spelling and explores developmental considerations in learning to spell. Suggests characteristics of an effective spelling program, including 60 to 75 minutes of instruction allocated over a 3- to 4-day cycle, and use of test-study sequences for directed word study. (ET)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Invented Spelling

Johnson, Harold A.; And Others – Reading and Writing Quarterly: Overcoming Learning Difficulties, 1994
Finds that the strategies used by children with hearing impairments to invent spellings were developmentally and phonologically similar to those used by hearing children. (SR)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Developmental Stages, Elementary Secondary Education, Hearing Impairments

Martens, Prisca A. – Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 1999
This longitudinal interpretive case study documents the role and significance of one preschooler's name in deepening her understanding of written language. Findings highlight the importance of an authentic, purposeful, literacy-rich, supportive environment for children, that provides them time to invent, predict, and guess how written language…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Children, Childrens Writing, Emergent Literacy

Manning, Maryann; Underbakke, Clark – Childhood Education, 2005
Over the last 30 years, much has been learned about how children develop as spellers. During that time, the literary confidence of many kindergarten, 1st-, and 2nd-grade children has been damaged by insisting they use conventional spelling when, in their thinking, it is impossible to understand how words can be spelled conventionally. This article…
Descriptors: Written Language, Teaching Methods, Kindergarten, Word Lists
Rivaldo, Renee – 1994
Since phonemic awareness is a crucial element in the invented spelling process, a survey of 15 whole language teachers determined the standpoint of phonemic awareness in the philosophy of whole language teachers. The 15 teachers, all 5 kindergarten and 10 first-grade teachers in a school district in western New York, were administered a 16-item…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Grade 1, Invented Spelling, Misconceptions

Invernizzi, Marcia; And Others – Elementary School Journal, 1994
Outlines a theory of developmental spelling, evolved from research on children's invented spellings, that can show teachers when best to teach aspects of spelling. Provides examples and several minilessons of the alternative approach to spelling instruction called Word Study, whereby words are examined by sound, by within-word patterns, and by…
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Invented Spelling

Uhry, Joanna K. – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 1999
Examines the relationship between ability to invent spellings and ability to finger-point read memorized text in 109 kindergartners in whole-language classrooms. Finds that letter name knowledge and phonemic awareness account for ability in finger-point reading, but that invented spelling, because it requires the left-to-right alphabetic principle…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Finger Spelling, Invented Spelling, Kindergarten