Learning to read is much more difficult than learning to speak. Most children teach themselves to speak with little or no difficulty. Yet a few years later when they come to learn to read they have to be taught how to do it; they do not pick up reading by themselves. This is because we speak in words and syllables, but we write in phonemes. Syllables do not naturally break down into the sounds of letters and letter units (i.e., phonemes) because these do not correspond to physiologically distinct articulatory gestures (Liberman, Shankweiler, and Studdert-Kennedy, 1967). Alphabetic writing was only invented when people realized that syllables could be artificially divided into smaller acoustically distinguishable phonemes that could be repre...
There are continuing debates about the best approach to teaching reading--phonics or whole language....
Reading is a complex cognitive skill that involves the extraction of meaning from printed or written...
Theories of normal reading development commonly propose that children move through various stages o...
Learning to Read A child of 6 knows the meanings of many spoken words—10,000 by one estimate (Anglin...
The authors review current knowledge about the cognitive processes underlying the early stages of wo...
The basis of literacy acquisition in alphabetic orthographies is the learning of the associations be...
The study of children's language abilities as they relate to the acquisition of reading skills ...
We review current knowledge about reading development and the origins of difficulties in learning to...
Part One. Early or "apprentice" reading is widely assumed to necessitate phonological encoding as me...
Reading behavior is receiving communication, making discriminative responses to graphic symbols and ...
Learning to read, and to spell are two of the most important cultural skills that must be acquired b...
Reading words may take several forms. Readers may utilize decoding, analogizing, or predicting to re...
Three tasks were employed to investigate the role of assembled phonology in beginning re aders. In t...
We review current knowledge about reading development and the origins of difficulties in learning to...
Reading is a highly complex, flexible and sophisticated cognitive activity, and word recognition con...
There are continuing debates about the best approach to teaching reading--phonics or whole language....
Reading is a complex cognitive skill that involves the extraction of meaning from printed or written...
Theories of normal reading development commonly propose that children move through various stages o...
Learning to Read A child of 6 knows the meanings of many spoken words—10,000 by one estimate (Anglin...
The authors review current knowledge about the cognitive processes underlying the early stages of wo...
The basis of literacy acquisition in alphabetic orthographies is the learning of the associations be...
The study of children's language abilities as they relate to the acquisition of reading skills ...
We review current knowledge about reading development and the origins of difficulties in learning to...
Part One. Early or "apprentice" reading is widely assumed to necessitate phonological encoding as me...
Reading behavior is receiving communication, making discriminative responses to graphic symbols and ...
Learning to read, and to spell are two of the most important cultural skills that must be acquired b...
Reading words may take several forms. Readers may utilize decoding, analogizing, or predicting to re...
Three tasks were employed to investigate the role of assembled phonology in beginning re aders. In t...
We review current knowledge about reading development and the origins of difficulties in learning to...
Reading is a highly complex, flexible and sophisticated cognitive activity, and word recognition con...
There are continuing debates about the best approach to teaching reading--phonics or whole language....
Reading is a complex cognitive skill that involves the extraction of meaning from printed or written...
Theories of normal reading development commonly propose that children move through various stages o...