ABSTRACT

This edited volume grew out of a conference that brought together beginning reading experts from the fields of education and the psychology of reading and reading disabilities so that they could present and discuss their research findings and theories about how children learn to read words, instructional contexts that facilitate this learning, background experiences prior to formal schooling that contribute, and sources of difficulty in disabled readers. The chapters bring a variety of perspectives to bear on a single cluster of problems involving the acquisition of word reading ability. It is the editors' keen hope that the insights and findings of the research reported here will influence and become incorporated into the development of practicable, classroom-based instructional programs that succeed in improving children's ability to become skilled readers. Furthermore, they hope that these insights and findings will become incorporated into the working knowledge that teachers apply when they teach their students to read, and into further research on reading acquisition.

part 2|50 pages

Processes and Instruction for Disabled Readers

chapter 7|28 pages

Consistency of Reading-Related Phonological Processes Throughout Early Childhood

Evidence From Longitudinal–Correlational and Instructional Studies

part 3|141 pages

Word Recognition in Context

chapter 13|26 pages

Phonics and Phonemes

Learning to Decode and Spell in a Literature-Based Program

chapter 14|16 pages

Motivating Contexts for Young Children's Literacy Development

Implications for Word Recognition

chapter 15|17 pages

Effective Beginning Literacy Instruction

Dialectical, Scaffolded, and Contextualized