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Morrison, Julie; Mosser, Leigh Ann – 1993
A study examined two methods of reading instruction, the whole language literature-based approach and the traditional basal approach. Eighty teachers from four diverse school districts in two midwestern states were surveyed to find out which method was the most widely used. Results indicated that 84% of the 50 teachers who responded used a…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Conventional Instruction, Elementary Education, Reading Instruction
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
McNinch, George W.; Gruber, Ellen J. – Reading Improvement, 1996
Investigates whether parents, teachers, and principals agree on the basic reading issue of whole language versus traditional skill literacy development. Finds that the three groups responded in essentially the same manner to items in the survey--they favored a broad, eclectic approach to emergent literacy development. (RS)
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Conventional Instruction, Elementary Education, Emergent Literacy
Grierson, Sirpa T.; Daniel, Larry G. – 1995
A study examined the attitudes of educators toward content area reading in the early elementary grades. A self-report survey instrument called the Attitudes Toward Content Area Reading (ATCAR) was developed to measure educators' attitudes and to ascertain whether there were different theoretical orientations of educators relative to content area…
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Conventional Instruction, Primary Education, Q Methodology
Schweiker, Karyn E.; Barksdale-Ladd, Mary Alice – 1992
Factors that influenced teachers to become reformers, reviewers, or resistors to whole language were investigated with specific examination of school culture. In this study three transitioning school sites were selected on the basis of their similarity in staffing and student size. Participants from each school involved three to four classroom…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Change Strategies, Conventional Instruction, Educational Change