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Language Experience Approach | 10 |
Writing Readiness | 10 |
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Reading Readiness | 6 |
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Blum, Irene H. | 1 |
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Moss, R. Kay | 1 |
Ribowsky, Helene | 1 |
Richgels, Donald J. | 1 |
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Combs, Martha – Reading Teacher, 1984
Proposes a variant of the language experience approach in which teachers provide simple models of repetitive sentences about an interesting object. (FL)
Descriptors: Language Experience Approach, Primary Education, Reading Readiness, Sentences
Hall, Susan E. M. – Insights into Open Education, 1986
Using student dictated stories to create class books is an exciting way to teach young children about books and writing. Children can thus use their own material as they learn to read, the books provide a class library, and writing through dictation allows young children to learn about reading and writing before they can read or write--even with…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Language Experience Approach, Prereading Experience, Primary Education
Moss, R. Kay; Stansell, John C. – 1981
Young children learn many important things about language from the television and radio ads they encounter that can help them learn to read and write. They learn that print carries messages that are personally important to them, that whatever can be said can also be written, what some forms of written language look like, and that language use can…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Language Experience Approach, Learning Activities, Radio
Ribowsky, Helene – 1985
A year-long, quasi-experimental study investigated the comparative effects of a whole language approach and a code emphasis approach upon the emergent literacy of 53 girls in two kindergarten classes in an all girls' parochial school in the Northeast. Subjects in the experimental class received instruction in Holdaway's Shared Book Experience…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Emergent Literacy, Kindergarten, Language Experience Approach

Richgels, Donald J. – Reading Teacher, 1987
Describes a program that associates phonics instruction with children's earliest reading and writing, using the ERIS method to teach sound/letter correspondences and to provide opportunities for writing and reading. (NKA)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Classroom Techniques, Instructional Innovation, Kindergarten

Blum, Irene H.; Taylor, Nancy E. – Reading World, 1983
Describes a six-step technique that capitalizes on children's experiences and interests while providing structure and redundancy within a creative framework to maximize sight word acquisition. (FL)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Childhood Interests, Language Acquisition, Language Experience Approach
Huse-Inman, Kathy – 1981
Aimed at elementary school teachers interested in promoting their students' enjoyment of and skill in writing, this guide offers a number of ideas for writing activities. The guide focuses on the creative use of language and suggests ways in which students can be stimulated to write poems and stories, create metaphors, write descriptions of people…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Course Content, Creative Writing, Descriptive Writing
Veatch, Jeannette – 1982
Four elements are essential for efficient, effective, and rewarding teaching of beginning reading. The first is the use of children's key vocabulary. Children are asked, in a prescribed fashion, what their very best word is of the moment. The teacher prints it in a prescribed fashion and uses it to help children acquire one-to-one correspondence…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Keywords, Language Experience Approach, Learning Motivation
Warash, Barbara Gibson – 1984
The West Virginia University Child Development Laboratory has successfully used microcomputers as a complement to their language experience approach to teaching three- and four-year-old children. The computer acts as a motivational tool, and gives children the opportunity to produce perfectly typed pictures or letters. The first encounter a child…
Descriptors: Child Language, Childhood Attitudes, Computer Assisted Instruction, Language Acquisition
Leavitt, Tamara Day – 1987
Integrating reading and writing at the primary level is important because writing and then reading back what has been written gives purpose to both, and the sense of overall purpose enhances reading while the sense of audience enhances writing. Another reason for starting this integration with beginning students is that writing creates a purpose…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Brainstorming, Content Area Reading, Content Area Writing