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Salzer, Richard T. – Educational Leadership, 1991
The Whole Language Movement may be the most widespread and fastest growing grassroots curriculum trend in U.S. education. Although a few Teachers Applying Whole Language (TAWL) groups are affiliated with school systems, the majority are supported entirely by teachers from different school districts meeting together voluntarily to advance their own…
Descriptors: Collegiality, Coping, Elementary Secondary Education, Professional Development
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Hiebert, Elfrieda H.; Fisher, Charles W. – Educational Leadership, 1990
A recent study comparing whole language and skills-oriented instruction found that students in whole language classes spent more time on cognitively complex literacy tasks. Educators need to balance the use of narrative and expository text, integrate subject matter areas, and use a variety of instructional grouping strategies. Includes 10…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Grouping (Instructional Purposes), Literacy Education, Reading Instruction
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Griss, Susan – Educational Leadership, 1994
When educators consciously integrate the arts and education, the benefits are magnified. Kinesthetic learning has wide-ranging applications, such as interpreting a concept through physical means to increase comprehension, exploring literature themes and feelings through creative movement, exploring the universality and particularity of human…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Elementary Secondary Education, Improvisation, Kinesthetic Methods
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Routman, Regie – Educational Leadership, 1997
Controversy rages over whole-language/phonics approaches to reading instruction, giving critics great school-bashing opportunities. Districts that have successfully incorporated whole language generally have planned for change, involved parents, proceeded slowly, built in ongoing professional development, provided adequate resources, reassured…
Descriptors: Educational Planning, Elementary Education, Guidelines, Parent Participation
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Monson, Robert J.; Pahl, Michele M. – Educational Leadership, 1991
Enlarges the phonics/whole language debate by focusing on the classroom teacher's evolving role. Whole language instruction involves a fundamental change in a teacher's belief system concerning classroom culture. A complex paradigm shift is needed from teachers' transmission of knowledge to students' transaction or engagement with constructing…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Classroom Environment, Elementary Education, Learning Processes
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Macginitie, Walter H. – Educational Leadership, 1991
Unless educators can learn from past extremes, the current emphasis on literature and whole language instruction may undermine phonics and other necessary principles. Fortunately, a reborn emphasis on writing will assist the development of accurate decoding and stress the phonemic structure of language. Educators must embrace "best" trends and…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Language Arts, Phonics
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Robbins, Patricia A. – Educational Leadership, 1990
Reading and writing at one New Hampshire school district are considered integrated processes. Writing generates an enthusiasm for reading, and reading creates the impetus for writing. Whole language instruction has produced high reading comprehension scores, an increase in book-reading quality and quantity, and a dramatic drop in special education…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Instructional Innovation, Program Implementation, Reading Instruction
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Freyd, Pamela, Lytle, James H. – Educational Leadership, 1990
Examines IBM's Writing to Read (WTR) program for kindergartners and first graders from four perspectives: its language learning paradigm, the computer program design, the research conducted on its effectiveness, and implementation considerations. Since costs outweigh learning benefits, educators should reconsider purchasing this program. Includes…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Cost Effectiveness, Elementary Education, Grade 1
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Bembridge, Teri – Educational Leadership, 1992
When commercially available tests failed to match their whole-language instructional practices, resource teachers in a Canadian school district developed their own instrument. Assembled over a five-year period, the Multi-Layered Assessment Package (MAP) is a set of procedures accompanied by suggested books, transcripts, and retelling and recording…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Evaluation Methods, Foreign Countries, Reading Tests
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Espe, Cathie; And Others – Educational Leadership, 1990
Although the whole language perspective requires no money, it does involve "kid watching," or knowledge of individual class members and their interests. As the experiences of two elementary teachers illustrate, educators need only look to their own backyards and to past/present historical events for rich instructional material. Includes three…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Language Arts, Material Development
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Koski, Mary – Educational Leadership, 1993
Change began in Saint Charles (Illinois) School District with a few teachers implementing new ideas in their own classrooms. Organized change began as principals and other administrators encouraged teachers to learn and grow. While teachers were developing process writing and whole-language programs, district embraced systemic change by entrusting…
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Integrated Curriculum
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Frazier, Darlene M.; Paulson, F. Leon – Educational Leadership, 1992
An Oregon elementary teacher encouraged a group of fourth grade students in a writing pullout program to share their writings in a portfolio she was assembling for an education class. The kids all volunteered their writing, learned to express themselves better, and asked to create their own portfolios. The experience fostered student ownership,…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Performance Tests, Portfolios (Background Materials), Self Esteem
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Strickland, Dorothy S. – Educational Leadership, 1998
As the phonics/whole-language debate continues, a method called "whole-part-whole" provides a balanced conceptual framework for thinking about and planning skills instruction. It addresses the need for teaching that is grounded in fundamental understandings about whole texts (stories, informational books, and poems), allows for indepth…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Elementary Education, Holistic Approach, Models
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Harris, Karen R.; Graham, Steve – Educational Leadership, 1996
Abolishing direct-instruction and skill-practice opportunities could have serious consequences for special-needs learners. Teachers should provide explicit and focused, even isolated instruction as needed and integrate it into the larger literacy context. This means conducting ongoing assessments of each student's abilities, skills, and progress…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Drills (Practice), Elementary Education, Learning Problems
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Lovitt, Zelene – Educational Leadership, 1990
If whole language classes are to be student-centered and teacher responsive, teachers must relinquish several commonly held assumptions regarding student performance levels and abilities, testing practices, lesson planning, and classroom control. In the process, they will gain the freedom to achieve their own potential and enhance their students'…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Elementary Secondary Education, Professional Development, Student Evaluation
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