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Shippen, Margaret E.; Reilly, Amysue; Dunn, Caroline – Journal of Direct Instruction, 2008
This study investigated the effects of two levels of intensity (one lesson per day or two lessons per day) of a spelling intervention on students at risk for school failure. A quasi-experimental group design with random assignment was used. Elementary-level participants (n = 39) enrolled in a 4-week summer remedial program progressed through the…
Descriptors: Spelling, Remedial Programs, At Risk Students, Spelling Instruction
Van Norman, Renee K.; Wood, Charles L. – Remedial and Special Education, 2008
Six kindergarten students at risk for reading difficulties were taught to tutor each other and provide accurate feedback with the use of a prerecorded sight word model. Students were taught the components of reciprocal peer tutoring and were asked to tutor each other on unknown, phonetically irregular sight words. An A-B-A-B reversal design…
Descriptors: Reading Difficulties, Sight Vocabulary, High Risk Students, Kindergarten
Peer reviewedJuel, Connie; Deffes, Rebecca – Educational Leadership, 2004
Anchoring new words in multiple contexts, teachers can make vocabulary meaningful and memorable. The forms of vocabulary instruction is presented so that the misidentification between words and their meanings can be avoided.
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Teaching Methods, Vocabulary Development, Sight Method
Kuehne, Jane M. – Journal of Research in Music Education, 2007
The purpose of this research was to discover materials and methods used and examine influences on how and why sight-singing is taught in Florida middle-school choral programs. Members of the Florida Vocal Association completed an online or paper version of a questionnaire (N = 152). Data yielded several results that support previous research and…
Descriptors: Singing, Teaching Methods, Music Education, Middle School Students
Peer reviewedOtto, Wayne – Journal of Reading, 1986
Offers a humorous perspective on being a proponent of the whole language approach to reading instruction in the face of those who favor phonics and specific skill instruction. (SRT)
Descriptors: Humor, Phonics, Reading Instruction, Reading Research
Peer reviewedGroff, Patrick – Ohio Reading Teacher, 1994
States that in the 1970s, sight words existed in a "topsy-turvy world" in which the variety of definitions was confusing. Suggests that readers recognize sight words as single, holistic units without segmenting and attending to letters one at a time, and without sounding out and blending letters sequentially. Explains the connection…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Phonics, Reading Instruction, Sight Method
Burnett, John – Journal of Early Childhood Literacy, 2007
Although the recent publication of the Rose Report appears to draw a line in the sand that privileges synthetic phonics over other methods in the UK, history indicates a pendulum swing of preference between whole-word and phonics since the advent of mass education. Suggesting that the current "victory" for exponents of synthetic phonics…
Descriptors: Phonics, Reading Instruction, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries
Skinner, Christopher H. – School Psychology Review, 2008
Nist and Joseph (2008) have confirmed earlier research showing that adding and interspersing a large number of time-consuming learning trials targeting known items (e.g., incremental rehearsal (IR) or interspersal) retards student learning rates. In addition, their current study has confirmed earlier research that adding and interspersing known…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Intervention, Behavior Change, Instructional Materials
Albert, Elaine – 1995
Reading is a skill--learning how the alphabet works by using it. Learning how to do it involves practice in building letters into words. As the decoding process is practiced, phonics moves into long-term storage. Building the skill of reading has the same 4 aspects as developing other skills: (1) the beginner uses the motion of his vocal organs to…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Phonics, Reading Instruction, Reading Skills
Nicholson, Tom – Nga Kete Korero: Journal of the Adult Reading & Learning Assistance Federation, 1996
This research review looks at whether learning to read is different for children and adults and the emphases of top-down, bottom-up, and connectionist views of skilled reading. Concludes that phonological awareness is an important part of skilled reading. (SK)
Descriptors: Adults, Children, Phonology, Reading Processes
Minarovic, Timothy J.; Bambara, Linda M. – Research and Practice for Persons with Severe Disabilities (RPSD), 2007
This study examined the effects of teaching employees with moderate intellectual disabilities to use sight-word checklists as antecedent prompts to self-initiate job tasks in varied and novel sequences. The intervention package consisted of (a) sight word reading and comprehension instruction, and (b) self-management training using first a…
Descriptors: Employees, Mental Retardation, Supported Employment, On the Job Training
Burns, Matthew K. – School Psychology Quarterly, 2007
Sight-word instruction can improve functioning with various daily, recreational, and work-related tasks among children with moderate to severe disabilities. Previous research has demonstrated the effectiveness of drill methods to teach sight words if the model contains at least 50% known items, which would also increase the number of opportunities…
Descriptors: Sight Vocabulary, Mental Retardation, Drills (Practice), Opportunities
Peer reviewedGroff, Patrick – Reading Horizons, 1975
Argues that proponents of the sight method must reevaluate some of their advice to teachers in light of recent research. (RB)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Primary Education, Reading Instruction, Sight Method
Peer reviewedBurnham, Denis – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2003
Investigates the degree to which native speech perception is superior to non-native speech perception. Shows that language specific speech perception is a linguistic rather than an acoustic phenomenon. Discusses results in terms of early speech perception abilities, experience with oral communication, cognitive ability, alphabetic versus…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Elementary Education, Phonics, Reading Instruction
Peer reviewedGaskins, Irene W. – Educational Leadership, 2004
Research demonstrates that students learn to read words in contextual guessing, letter-sound decoding, analogy, and insight. The reading subtest results had demonstrated that the students in the word detectives group read significantly more words correctly than the students in the benchmark word identification program.
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Reading Instruction, Reading Skills, Word Recognition

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