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Goodman, Kenneth S. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1976
Responds to Peter Mosenthal's criticism (volume 12, number 1). (AA)
Descriptors: Miscue Analysis, Reading Instruction, Reading Processes, Reading Research
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Goodman, Kenneth S.; Buck, Catherine – Reading Teacher, 1973
Modifies some widely held beliefs based on previous research on miscue analysis. (RB)
Descriptors: Dialect Studies, Elementary Education, Miscue Analysis, Oral Reading
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Goodman, Kenneth S.; Gollasch, Frederick V. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1980
Presents evidence from oral reading miscue research to support a psycholinguistic view of why omissions take place and how they reflect the reading process. Classifies word level omissions as deliberate and nondeliberate. (MKM)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Miscue Analysis, Oral Reading, Psycholinguistics
Goodman, Kenneth S.; Gollasch, Frederick V. – 1981
Intended to help reading instructors better understand the nature of reading errors, this report carefully examines one type of error--word omissions. Following a review of research in the area of omissions, the report discusses in detail the omission patterns, in context, of a single reader, then summarizes four key points about omissions…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education, Error Analysis (Language), Miscue Analysis
Goodman, Kenneth S.; Gespass, Suzanne – 1983
This paper is based on a transactional viewpoint (involving writer, reader, and text) in which the text is no longer external but is constructed and reconstructed by the reader during reading. Using a database developed for a previous study (Goodman and Goodman, 1978), this research examined pronoun usage in three basal texts by evaluating the…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Language Patterns, Miscue Analysis, Pronouns
Goodman, Kenneth S. – 1983
Using a large, preexisting miscue analysis database, a study explored the influence of specific text characteristics on reader/text interaction. Subjects--24 second, 32 fourth, and 32 sixth graders--read three texts. Four specific questions were addressed: What relevant miscue patterns do the readers of each text and of the combined three texts…
Descriptors: Determiners (Languages), Elementary Education, Language Research, Miscue Analysis
Goodman, Kenneth S.; Gollasch, Frederick V., Ed. – 1982
Encompassing his work in the psycholinguistics of reading, this book presents Kenneth Goodman's major papers focusing on miscue analysis, the theoretical model of the reading processes derived from it, and relevant research perspectives. Following an introduction to Goodman's works, the articles discuss the following topics: (1) the reading…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Decoding (Reading), Epistemology, Miscue Analysis
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Goodman, Kenneth S. – Research in the Teaching of English, 1975
The influence of cues in the visual peripheral field is not a random one.
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Figural Aftereffects, Miscue Analysis, Reading
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Goodman, Kenneth S. – English Journal, 1974
Valuable insights into the reading process can be gained by analyzing children's reading miscues and by encouring children to use their linguistic knowledge when reading. (JH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Error Patterns, Language Ability
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Goodman, Kenneth S.; Goodman, Yetta M. – Harvard Educational Review, 1977
Argues that reading, like speaking and writing, is an active language process in which readers display their sophistication as functional psychlinguists. While it is difficult to understand these active, underlying processes, authors advocate the use of oral reading as a data base. Presents a typology of miscues and demonstrates how they provide…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Decoding (Reading), Language Research, Miscue Analysis
Goodman, Kenneth S.; Burke, Carolyn L. – 1973
Reading is a process in which written language conveys meaning between writer and reader. The reader uses graphic, syntactic, and semantic cues to get to the meaning. This study examines the reading process of 94 subjects with proficiency levels ranging from low second grade to high tenth grade using the Goodman Taxonomy of Reading Miscues. The…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Decoding (Reading), Miscue Analysis, Reading Ability
Goodman, Kenneth S.; Goodman, Yetta M. – New York University Education Quarterly, 1981
Errors in reading and speaking are not the result of failure to comprehend or communicate. Rather, such errors are "miscues," which show the effects of psycholinguistic processes that have taken unexpected turns. The nature of these miscues reveals the underlying cognitive schema that guide a person's comprehension and verbalization. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Child Language, Comprehension, Elementary Secondary Education, Error Analysis (Language)
Goodman, Kenneth S.; Goodman, Yetta M. – 1978
Research conducted to refine and perfect a theory and model of the reading process is presented in this report. Specifically, studies of the reading miscues of 96 students who were either speakers of English as a second language or of stable, rural dialects are detailed. Chapters deal with the following topics: methodology, the reading process,…
Descriptors: Educational Diagnosis, Elementary Secondary Education, English (Second Language), Miscue Analysis
Altwerger, Bess; Goodman, Kenneth S. – 1981
As part of a larger study of the oral reading of elementary school students representing eight linguistic populations in the United States, a study was conducted to discover why readers make the same miscues at the same point in a text and to discover factors in the text that contribute to this phenomenon. Subjects were second, fourth, and sixth…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cross Cultural Studies, Elementary Education, Error Analysis (Language)
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Goodman, Kenneth S.; Niles, Olive S. – 1970
Broad and major concerns dealing with reading are set forth in this monograph to provoke discussion and examination by both researchers and practitioners. In Part 1, Kenneth S. Goodman presents a psycholinguistic view of language and reading (within a transformational-generative framework) as essentially a set of processes of recoding, decoding,…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Generative Grammar, Language Acquisition, Language Learning Levels