ABSTRACT

First Published in 1979. These volumes explore the range and depth of our theoretical and practical knowledge about early reading instruction. Contributors-psychologists, linguists, instructional designers, reading and special education experts were asked to address three questions: (1) What is the nature of skilled reading? (2) How is reading skill acquired? (3) What do the nature of skilled reading and the process of acquiring reading skill jointly suggest for reading instruction? This is Volume I of a collection of essays looking at topics such as reading stages, coding and comprehension skills, word recognition, language skills, instruction and teaching theories and an analysis of reading two beginning reading programs.

part I|108 pages

Word Recognition

chapter 1|27 pages

The Great Debate

Ten Years Later, With a Modest Proposal for Reading Stages

chapter 4|27 pages

Dysfunctions in Reading Disability

There's More than Meets the Eye

part II|90 pages

Language

part III|94 pages

Instruction

part IV|62 pages

Discussion

chapter 14|26 pages

How the Mind Works When Reading

Describing Elephants No One Has Ever Seen

chapter 15|11 pages

Theories and Practice of Beginning Reading

A View From the Back of the Bus