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Rasinski, Timothy V. – 1989
Holistic approaches to remedial reading can be effective in promoting the reading growth of poor readers. Learning to read is most effective when it occurs in a context of functional and meaningful literacy activity. In order to create such a context students need to be engaged with real texts in a search for meaning. Repeated readings, taped…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Reading Difficulties, Reading Fluency, Reading Strategies
Carroll, Vickie – 1997
Recent research confirms that children learn to read best by using a balanced literacy program incorporating a combination of explicit phonics, whole language, and good literature. Long before children are able to engage in reading themselves, they must feel that reading is something they want to do. Comfortable and early familiarity with letters…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Elementary Education, Phonics, Reading Instruction
Smith, Carl B., Ed. – 2003
During the 1970s direct phonics instruction was the preferred method of reading instruction. In the 1980s the whole language concept caught on and phonics instruction was considered defunct. In the 1990s the pendulum, in the process of swinging back, was intercepted before it went to the extreme of "all phonics," by a balanced approach…
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Elementary Education, Language Arts, Literature Reviews
Hurst, Carol Otis – 1999
This comprehensive encyclopedia of children's literature for the lower grades aims to inspire teachers, librarians, and students to delve into picture books and find ways to integrate books into the curriculum. The encyclopedia offers information on themes, focus picture books, and author studies to help educators become familiar with specific…
Descriptors: Authors, Childrens Literature, Class Activities, Illustrations
Austin, Patricia – Teaching and Learning Literature with Children and Young Adults, 1996
Contains an interview with Patricia MacLachlan, former teacher and author of the award-winning novel "Sarah, Plain and Tall" about her views on the latest trends in teaching reading and writing to children. (TB)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Interviews, Reading Instruction

Mason, David; Ewoldt, Carolyn – American Annals of the Deaf, 1996
This position paper discusses how the tenets of Whole Language and Deaf Bilingual-Bicultural Education complement each other. It stresses that Whole Language emphasizes a two-way teaching/learning process and Deaf Bilingual-Bicultural Education emphasizes mutual respect in the sociocultural experiences and values of deaf and hearing people.…
Descriptors: Biculturalism, Bilingual Education, Curriculum, Deafness

Morris, Darrell – Reading Horizons, 1996
Describes how children develop printed word knowledge when taught with a top-down, sentence-based approach. Cites four stages in word knowledge development: word as a nameable object in text; word as an object with a beginning element; word as an object with a discernible beginning and end; and word as an object with a beginning, middle, and end.…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Case Studies, Grade 1, Individual Development

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

Rubin, Hyla; Eberhardt, Nancy C. – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 1996
Declares that invented spelling ability reflects young children's developing awareness of the internal structure of words. Examines effects of an instructional approach that emphasized integration of language analysis teaching into the whole-language kindergarten curriculum. Finds that children who received instruction were representing all the…
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Instructional Effectiveness, Invented Spelling, Kindergarten

Morrison, Timothy G.; And Others – Reading Research and Instruction, 1997
Examines relationships between theoretical beliefs toward reading instruction and attitudes about pupil control. Uses the Theoretical Orientation to Reading Profile (TORP) and Pupil Control Ideology (PCI). Finds that (1) as teachers moved toward the whole language end of the TORP scale, PCI scores were more humanistic; and (2) teachers oriented…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Elementary Education, Ideology, Phonics

Fitzsimmons, Phil – Reading Online, 2002
Discusses the state of elementary education in Fiji. Provides one Fijian principal's optimistic approach to implementing a whole language approach to the teaching of reading. Notes the teachers' original opposition to change, and the difficulty of maintaining change. (PM)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Educational Change, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries

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

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

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
Cochran, Judith M. – Instructor, 1989
One way to give students the most comprehensive reading instruction is to combine techniques from three approaches to reading: literature based reading instruction, the whole language strategy, and the use of basal readers. Lesson plans and student activities which demonstrate this combined approach are presented. (IAH)
Descriptors: Basal Reading, Class Activities, Elementary Education, Junior High Schools