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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Supporting the emergent writer in grade 1

Stark, Donna Wakeland 01 January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
32

Writing workshop in a whole language classroom: Effects on reading comprehension, written language, and writing skills

Dodd, Kathleen Muriel 01 January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
33

Publishing class books in first grade: Making the reading-writing connection

Heywood, H. Lawrence 01 January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
34

Embellishing the art of writing instead of impairing it during first-grade studies

Canelo, Maria Carmen 01 January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
35

A guidebook for implementing a writer's workshop

Hartnett, Kimberly Mackay 01 January 1998 (has links)
The purpose of this project is to provide beginning teachers or teachers new to writing instruction with a step-by-step guideline for implementing writer's workshop in a K-3 classroom. The first eight weeks of writer's workshop are outlined and defined complete with prompts and reflections teachers can use to make this strategy responsive to the needs of their students.19 440 0 Thesis (M.A.)--California State University, San Bernardino, 1998.
36

The Relationship of Written Expression to Self Concept in Primary Children

Case, Anna Lou 10 August 1972 (has links)
This thesis, the outcome of nearly three years of preparation, including study, development of procedures, trial and observation, was begun in an attempt to answer the following questions: How may original writing among elementary pupils be motivated successfully? Can positive feelings about self be promoted to a measurable degree as a result of emphasizing individual oral and written expression? Although much thinking and evaluating occurred during the three years, the experimentation and results reported here are limited to the work accomplished and findings obtained during the third year. The twenty-six children involved in this study were third-year elementary pupils, whose ages ranged from seven to nine years. During the experimental period, listening, speaking, thinking, and writing were emphasized in the language arts program. A variety of topics provided subjects for written composition. To test the hypothesis that a measurable increase in self concept or self report ratings could be brought about by experiencing feelings of success and acceptance as a result of self-expression in writing, the Piers-Harris Children's Self Concept Scale was administered to two third grade classes, the experimental group and a control group, at the beginning and at the conclusion of an eight-week experimental period. Average reading scores from the Metropolitan Achievement Test, Form F, were available as an index to the ability of the two groups. During the experimental time, a writing topic was presented to the experimental group daily. Questions were used to promote discussion, elicit ideas, and encourage thinking and interest. When the majority of the group members had participated orally, and appeared to be interested and involved, paper was distributed and writing was begun. The writer could choose the form his writing was to take, and a variety of ideas could be derived from the topic presented. The result might be an account of a personal experience, original imaginative writing, rhymed or unrhymed verse, or a factual report. At the conclusion of the eight-week experimental period, self report scores of the two groups were compared. To demonstrate a significant change in score from the initial to the final report, a difference in individual raw scores of ten or more points was required. The raw scores of four subjects in the experimental group, and two subjects in the control group increased by ten or more points. However. the findings of this study indicated no significant differences to the self concepts of children in the experimental group as compared to the self concepts of children in the control group as a result of the writing treatment.
37

Kindergarten Children and Their Concepts About Print: A Developmental Study Based on Bloom's Theory of School Learning

Trietsch, Patti Dixon 12 1900 (has links)
This study describes the developmental movement of kindergarten children from oral language toward written communication. The study describes and documents evidence of a sample of kindergarten children as they interact with print concepts in a kindergarten environment. The subjects were thirty kindergarten students randomly selected from three specific kindergartens identified as implementing the Key Vocabulary approach of Sylvia Ashton-Warner. The classrooms were public school kindergartens located in a suburban area of North Central Texas. From the findings several conclusions can be drawn. The learning of kindergarten children can be documented and a profile of that learning can be developed that will have possible future use in the learning career of the child. Kindergarten children may perceive the reading of a story to the group differently from the teacher. The perception of the process of writing by kindergarten children may be different from that of adults. There was evidence of children's writing in their movement from oral language toward print.
38

Evaluating the implementation of the reading and writing instruction programme in the foundation phase of Lobethal Circuit in Sekhukhune

Maphutha, Maphale Juliah January 2018 (has links)
Thesis (M. Ed.) -- University of Limpopo, 2018 / The importance of programme evaluation is acknowledged by many authors. However, less emphasis is given to understanding programme implementation (Duttweiller & Dayton, 2009; HSRC: South African National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 2012; Romm and Dichaba, 2015). Simply assessing a programme impact without a clear understanding of the degree to which the programme was actually implemented can result in inaccurate findings. The effective evaluation of both programme impacts and implementation can provide a more holistic perspective of programmes and an increased ability to identify and share best practices or weaknesses of programmes (Duerden and Witt, 2012). The purpose of this study was to evaluate the implementation of the Reading and Writing Instruction Programme (RWIP) in two primary schools situated in Lobethal Circuit. A qualitative approach was adopted using a case study design. Data collection was done through observations, interviews and documents analysis. A thematic approach was used to analyse the data while conclusions were drawn based on the themes that emerged during data collection and analysis. The results of the study indicate that there is implementation of the RWI programme. However, schools differ on how they apply the strategies that are outlined in the programme. The study recommends that there should be strong collaborations between Room to Read, schools, communities, circuit, district and provincial offices so that everyone understands the key components/elements of the Reading and Writing Instruction (RWI) Programme and how to apply them.
39

The Relationship Between Piagetian Developmental Levels and the Persuasive Writing Ability of Third, Fourth, and Fifth Graders

Poulsen, Belinda Gae 12 1900 (has links)
Research questions addressed whether (1) the instruction was effective, (2) performance on persuasive tasks differed by grade level following instruction, (3) performance on persuasive tasks differed by Piagetian developmental level following instruction, and (4) whether performance differed between monolingual and bilingual subjects. Students wrote four persuasive compositions for assessment, two before instruction was administered and two after instruction. Knudson's holistic scoring rubric was used to evaluate essays for overall quality. Other measures of writing were evaluated including the number of words students used in their writing, the number of reasons included in the essay, the number of reasons per hundred words, and whether the paper had a conclusion or not. Further, the number of elaborations used in the paper was determined, as well as the number of elaborations per hundred words, and the ratio of the number of words used in elaborations compared with the total number of words in the composition.
40

Incidências do sujeito do inconscienete em produções escritas de crianças

Mércia Irabel Soares 28 June 2013 (has links)
A presente dissertação enfoca produções textuais infantis, encontrando-se vinculada ao projeto intitulado: Sujeito do inconsciente, discurso e inserção social em situações de aquisição e distúrbios de linguagem, obedecendo aos critérios metodológicos adotados pelo projeto citado. Sua proposta da pesquisa é contribuir para que os docentes tenham um olhar mais atento à escrita infantil, um olhar que não se limite aos aspectos cognitivos, geralmente privilegiados pela maioria dos teóricos, cujos trabalhos dão sustentação ao trabalho pedagógico e, assim, as práticas em sala de aula. Dessa maneira, essa pesquisa recorre aos trabalhos realizados no campo da linguística estrutural e da psicanálise, notadamente a conceitos elaborados por Freud e Lacan. Assim, ela tem como objetivo geral: investigar as incidências subjetivas em produções de crianças em processo de aquisição da língua escrita, levando em consideração a imbricação entre o sujeito do inconsciente e o funcionamento da língua na escrita. Já os objetivos específicos consistem em investigar o funcionamento da língua, ou seja, os processos metafóricos e metonímicos, bem como, investigar formações do inconsciente cujos indícios marquem o texto, como: esquecimento de palavras, de fatos, troca de palavras, lapsos de escrita, mutilação de palavras. Para tanto, foi desenvolvida uma atividade de produção textual com crianças, ambos os sexos, compreendidas na faixa etária de sete oito anos, alunos do segundo ano do primeiro ciclo de escola pública, da cidade do Recife. Os critérios de análise foram guiados por princípios e conceitos oriundos da linguística estrutural, particularmente Saussure e Jakobson, e da psicanálise freudiana e lacaniana. Os resultados mostram como a produção dos textos contou com a imbricação entre o funcionamento estrutural da língua e as formações inconscientes, que foram deixando seus traços no texto. / This dissertation focuses on text production for children, it is linked to the class project named: subject of unconscious, discussion and social insertion in learning situations and language disorder, it follows the methodical criteria used by the class project a bready made above. The goal of this research is drawing the attention of teachers to the writing of children, not only to the cognitive aspects, genially cited by most of theorist, whose, theories support pedagogic work in classrooms. So this class of research turns to researches on linguistic and psychoanalysis, known concepts of Freud and Lacan. Then, its general goal: investigate the subjective incidences of childrens glasswork, larine how to write, considering the fart between the subject of unconscious and the working of language in writing. The specific goals consist of investigation the functioning of the language, that is, the metaphorical and metonymic processes, and investigate formations of unconscious whose signs mark the text. As forgetting words, bad diction, so it was developed and a activity of producing texts with children, both genders, between seven and length years, students of the second grade of the first cycle in public schools, in the city of Recife, the criteria of analysis were guild by principles and concept form Linguistics, specially Saussure and Jakobson and psychoanalysis of Freud and Lacan. The results have shown now the production of texts and to do with facts of structural functioning formation that leaves clue in the text.

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