ABSTRACT

The need to know why as well as how children and youth respond as they do to reading instruction has guided the selection of this book’s content. The second edition of this title, originally published in 1990, has retained and elaborated upon the three major themes previously presented: that reading is a linguistic process; that motivation, the affective domain, may be as important in learning to read as the cognitive domain; and that the reality of learning theory is to be found in the mechanisms of the brain where information is mediated and memory traces are stored.

The text integrates views from cognitive psychology, psycholinguistics, and neuropsychology as they relate to reading and writing. A learning-motivation model is provided to present associative learning, conceptualization, and self-directed reading in a hierarchical relationship with distinct cognitive and affective components. The distinction between beginning and proficient reading is maintained throughout the text.

part I|2 pages

The Reading Process

chapter 1|26 pages

Definition of Reading

chapter 2|32 pages

Motivation for Reading

part II|2 pages

Cognitive Dimensions

chapter 3|27 pages

Reading as a Linguistic Skill

chapter 4|29 pages

Memory, Intelligence, and Literacy

chapter 5|22 pages

Cognitive Styles and Learning Strategies

part III|2 pages

Sensory Discrimination of Symbols

chapter 6|35 pages

Brain Functions of Language

chapter 7|30 pages

Speech Perception in Reading

chapter 8|35 pages

Visual Perception of Print

chapter 9|28 pages

Integration of Sensory Systems

part IV|2 pages

Diagnosis, Testing, and Evaluation

chapter 10|21 pages

Individual Analysis for Reading Improvement

chapter 11|18 pages

Tests for Analysis and Evaluation

chapter 12|21 pages

Responsibility for Reading Development

part V|2 pages

Learning-Motivation Theory Applied

chapter 14|23 pages

Thought Processes in Conceptual Reading

chapter 15|21 pages

Creative Reading and Writing