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Freeman, Timothy J.; McLaughlin, T. F. – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1984
The effects of modeling vocabulary words, using a tape recorder, on six high school learning disabled boys' sight-word reading were examined in a multiple-baseline design. Results indicated an increase in correct oral response rates of isolated word lists and a sharp decrease in each student's oral error rates. (Authors)
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, High Schools, Learning Disabilities, Males
Monroe, Johnna; Staunton, Jeannine – 2000
This report describes a program for improving sight word recognition and the ability to improve reading skills. The targeted population consists of a kindergarten class and a primary self-contained special education class. The schools are located in a large metropolitan city. The problem of poor sight-word recognition was documented with student…
Descriptors: Action Research, Instructional Effectiveness, Kindergarten, Primary Education
Warner, Dolores – Reading Horiz, 1970
Descriptors: Attitudes, Basic Reading, College Students, Phonics
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Stolee, Peter B. – Reading Improvement, 1970
Descriptors: Basic Reading, Initial Teaching Alphabet, Malagasy, Material Development
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Cunningham, Patricia – Reading Horizons, 1979
Suggests a variation on the language experience approach designed for groups of nonverbal children. (MKM)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Language Acquisition, Language Experience Approach, Language Handicaps
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Kibby, Michael W. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1979
Reports on an investigation of the effects of teaching first grade children two sets of six words by phonics and sight word methods in three instructional conditions with either a selection or production response. (MKM)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Grade 1, Phonics, Primary Education
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Ehri, Linnea C.; Roberts, Kathleen T. – Child Development, 1979
First graders were taught to read words either in printed sentence contexts or printed singly on flash cards. Post-test scores indicated that context-trained children learned more about the semantic identities of printed words, while flash card-trained children could read the words faster and learned more about orthographic forms. (JMB)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Comparative Analysis, Elementary School Students, Learning Processes
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Watson, T. Steuart; Ray, Kimberly P. – School Psychology Quarterly, 1997
Evaluates the effectiveness of two different intertrial intervals for increasing the sight word vocabulary of four learning disabled students. Results indicate that, when measuring learning as a function of instructional time, immediate presentation resulted in a faster learning rate than did the five-second condition for three of the…
Descriptors: Children, Elementary Education, Intervention, Learning Disabilities
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Levy, Betty Ann; Lysynchuk, Linda – Scientific Studies of Reading, 1997
Compares effectiveness of four different methods for acquiring initial reading vocabulary--onset plus vowel, rimes, phoneme segmentation and blending, and simple repetition of whole words. Finds that beginning nonreaders acquired the trained words fastest in the onset and rime conditions, and most slowly in the whole word condition. Finds the same…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Instructional Effectiveness, Phonemes, Primary Education
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Mosley, Valerie P.; And Others – Reading Improvement, 1997
Compares the effectiveness of classroom instruction using constant time delay and community-based instruction to teach a functional sight word vocabulary to students with moderate mental retardation. Finds no statistically significant differences between the two approaches. Discusses implications for practitioners and offers suggestions for…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Functional Reading, Instructional Effectiveness, Moderate Mental Retardation
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Share, David L.; Gur, Talya – Cognition and Instruction, 1999
Examined the strategies employed by 30 Israeli preschool children when identifying noncommercial print appearing in their kindergartens. Found that 5-year olds, but not 4-year olds, attended to print rather than to contextual cues. Results point to a causal role for alphabetic and phonological skills in the development of preschool word…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Foreign Countries, Kindergarten Children, Language Acquisition
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Van der Bijl, Corne; Alant, Erna; Lloyd, Lyle – Research in Developmental Disabilities: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2006
The aim of this research study was to compare two strategies of sight word instruction in children attending a school for learners with moderate to severe mental disability, namely modified orthography (MO) and modified orthography where an association was made between the modification and the traditional orthography (MO/TO) together with a…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Reading Instruction, Instructional Effectiveness, Children
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
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Hutzler, Florian; Ziegler, Johannes C.; Perry, Conrad; Wimmer, Heinz; Zorzi, Marco – Cognition, 2004
Learning to read a relatively irregular orthography, such as English, is harder and takes longer than learning to read a relatively regular orthography, such as German. At the end of grade 1, the difference in reading performance on a simple set of words and nonwords is quite dramatic. Whereas children using regular orthographies are already close…
Descriptors: German, English, Reading Achievement, Language Acquisition
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Crawford, Shauna; Elliott, Robert T.; Hoekman, Katherine – British Journal of Visual Impairment, 2006
Two groups of sighted pre-school children were taught to name six braille letters: one group received phoneme instruction and the other grapheme instruction. Ten boys and ten girls (average age 4:5 years) participated. There was a statistically significant advantage for the phoneme group (Experiment 1). In a repeated measures design, 16 sighted…
Descriptors: Braille, Phonemes, Graphemes, Rhyme
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