NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 7 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Butyniec-Thomas, Jean; Woloshyn, Vera E. – Journal of Experimental Education, 1997
Whether explicit-strategy instruction combined with whole-language instruction would improve third graders' spelling more than using either approach alone was studied with 37 students. Findings suggest that young children learn to spell best when they are taught a repertoire of effective strategies in a meaningful context. (SLD)
Descriptors: Context Effect, Elementary School Students, Grade 3, Learning Strategies
Greenspan, Stanley; Lodish, Richard – Phi Delta Kappan, 1991
As experiences of two first graders show, learning occurs in split-second initiatives that children take with others as they try to attend, engage, interact, communicate, and reason. Before children can learn reading, writing, and arithmetic, they must know how to learn. Children cannot learn two-way communication with gestures, words, or symbols…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Communication Skills, Individual Development, Learning Strategies
Layman, Traci Arbogast; O'Neal, Thelma Lucille – 1996
Early childhood educators are concerned with the most effective method of integrating whole language and phonics to maximize emergent literacy skills. In kindergarten, it is especially important to provide the students with a variety of institutional approaches to accommodate different learning styles. A study examined the effectiveness of Super…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Emergent Literacy, Kindergarten, Learning Strategies
Sjosten-Bell, Wendy – 1997
There are continuing debates about the best approach to teaching reading--phonics or whole language. The most valuable link to learning to read is phonological or phonemic awareness, as soon as the alphabetic system is mastered. After phonemic awareness has been established, students enter the orthographic stage where they can process longer…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Classroom Techniques, Decoding (Reading), Educational Environment
Schulz, Elizabeth – Teacher Magazine, 1991
Describes the experiences of first grade teachers who use the whole-language approach to teaching and learning. Learning involves students participating in activities they find meaningful and sharing knowledge with their peers. Students must exercise initiative in learning, and they are responsible for making choices. (SM)
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Excellence in Education, Grade 1, Learning Strategies
Hunt, Geraldine – 1994
A program was designed to improve the reading skills of the second grade at-risk students in a suburban K-6 elementary school located northwest of Chicago, Illinois. The second grade at-risk students could not read fluently at the conclusion of the academic school year, and consequently did not exhibit strong reading comprehension skills. A…
Descriptors: Action Research, Cognitive Style, Grade 2, High Risk Students
Richards, Janet C.; Gipe, Joan P. – 1992
Many teachers with a whole language philosophical orientation question how to cover mandated district objectives using whole language instruction. One problem is that curriculum objectives are usually presented in discrete, isolated fragments. Second, teachers are also expected to document what skills they have covered. Third, specific guidelines…
Descriptors: Conflict of Interest, Curriculum Guides, Educational Objectives, Elementary School Teachers