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Skinner, Christopher H. – School Psychology Review, 2008
Nist and Joseph (2008) have confirmed earlier research showing that adding and interspersing a large number of time-consuming learning trials targeting known items (e.g., incremental rehearsal (IR) or interspersal) retards student learning rates. In addition, their current study has confirmed earlier research that adding and interspersing known…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Intervention, Behavior Change, Instructional Materials
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Otto, Wayne – Journal of Reading, 1986
Offers a humorous perspective on being a proponent of the whole language approach to reading instruction in the face of those who favor phonics and specific skill instruction. (SRT)
Descriptors: Humor, Phonics, Reading Instruction, Reading Research
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Groff, Patrick – Ohio Reading Teacher, 1994
States that in the 1970s, sight words existed in a "topsy-turvy world" in which the variety of definitions was confusing. Suggests that readers recognize sight words as single, holistic units without segmenting and attending to letters one at a time, and without sounding out and blending letters sequentially. Explains the connection…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Phonics, Reading Instruction, Sight Method
Albert, Elaine – 1995
Reading is a skill--learning how the alphabet works by using it. Learning how to do it involves practice in building letters into words. As the decoding process is practiced, phonics moves into long-term storage. Building the skill of reading has the same 4 aspects as developing other skills: (1) the beginner uses the motion of his vocal organs to…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Phonics, Reading Instruction, Reading Skills
Ginsberg, Amy – 2000
An intense debate exists around the most beneficial and successful method for teaching young children how to read. On the one side is sight-reading or the look-say method which promotes learning to read by immediate recognition of words learned through "memorization." In contrast to the sight method, the phonics method aims at teaching…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Decoding (Reading), Literature Reviews, Phonics
Chall, Jeanne S. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1989
Criticizes Marie Carbo's article, "Debunking the Great Phonics Myth" (in Kappan's November 1988 issue), for waging a relentless debate against phonics and falsely attributing low U.S. reading achievement scores to a phonics emphasis. Clears up confusions and inaccuracies in Carbo's article concerning first and second editions of the…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Phonics, Reading Research, Reading Strategies
Johns, Jerry – 1989
The reading profession's current emphasis on whole language may have helped to raise the recurring debate between meaning-based (whole language) and phonics-based (code emphasis) approaches to teaching reading. As some researchers have linked whole language with whole word, phonics advocates have come forth with renewed vigor to offer a series of…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Phonics, Primary Education, Reading Attitudes
Blumenfeld, Samuel – American Education, 1983
Attacks the whole-word, or "look-say," method of teaching reading, widely used in the United States since 1836. Cites evidence to support this method as the sole reason for the high functional illiteracy rate in the U.S. Recommends the use of intensive phonics as the solution to America's reading problem. (NJ)
Descriptors: Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education, Illiteracy, Phonics
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Lewandowski, Glen – Reading World, 1979
Lists 334 words that three frequently used word lists have in common. Of these, 137 are phonically consistent and can be taught using phonics while 197 should be taught by sight-word techniques. (TJ)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Phonics, Pronunciation, Reading Instruction
Albert, Elaine – 1993
Some researchers believe that phonics is the more natural way to teach reading because, instead of requiring the learner to memorize whole words, phonics shows the learner the process by which alphabetic writing is converted into speech. The human baby babbles more than enough phonemes for any language. Before there was an alphabet, humans drew…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Brain, Early Childhood Education, Language Processing
Lombarbdo, Mary A. – Library Media Connection, 2005
Children listen, act out and recite nursery rhymes and thus learn about rhyming words, absorb the rhythm of English language, and begin to develop speech sound awareness in an interactive and fun way, which can further enhance reading achievement. Encouraging children to dramatize the rhymes leads to role plays which uses basic vocabulary sight…
Descriptors: Basic Vocabulary, Sight Method, Reading Achievement, Nursery Rhymes
Partridge, Susan – 1979
In the neurological impress method the teacher sits slightly behind the child, a book is held jointly, and the teacher and child read aloud simultaneously with the teacher directing his/her voice into the child's ear as the child slides a finger along each line following the words as they are spoken. No attempt is made to teach sounds or word…
Descriptors: Diagnostic Teaching, Listening Skills, Literature Reviews, Oral Reading
Weaver, Connie – 1990
The question of whether research supports a "phonics first" approach to teaching reading is not entirely answerable by factual evidence or statistical data: the issue is partly a matter of values and opinion. The debate is over whether phonics should be taught and tested in isolation, as a prelude to reading texts (the phonics-first…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Trends, Elementary Education, Phonics
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Milligan, Jerry L. – Journal of Reading, 1986
Focuses on seven errors made by teachers of remedial reading in elementary, middle, and junior high school programs. Suggests corrections and acknowledges teachers who treat reading as a skill that can be learned and refined through reading. (JK)
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Elementary Secondary Education, Oral Reading, Phonics
Mrowicki, Linda G. – 1983
Any discussion of English as a Second Language (ESL) literacy should address three critical areas: who the learners are, what is to be taught, and how the literacy skills are to be taught. Three distinct groups of students can be classified as "non-literate" in their own language: pre-literates, illiterates, and semi-literates. Two approaches are…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Literacy, Audiolingual Methods, Course Content
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