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Influence of Two Methods of Teaching Reading on Personality, Interest, Mental Health, and BehaviorShinpaugh, Ina Couch 08 1900 (has links)
The problem of this study was to evaluate the traditional method of teaching reading and the modern method of teaching reading as they influence personality, interest, mental health, and behavior.
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A comparative study of educational techniques alone and in combination with Delicato techniques with children having reading and writing difficultiesBooth, V. H. A. January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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Reading Recovery : what makes it special?Birtwistle, John January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Attitudes to Reading: An Investigation Across the Primary YearsBlack, Anne-Marie L, res.cand@acu.edu.au January 2006 (has links)
Students’ attitudes to reading and the texts they choose to read impact on literacy achievement and willingness to engage with literacy-related activities in the primary years of schooling. This study was conducted in an urban Catholic school in Queensland in Years 1 to 7. Students’ developing attitudes to reading and the perceptions of these attitudes held by their teachers were examined. An adapted version of the Elementary Reading Attitude Survey (McKenna & Kear, 1990) and Teacher Checklist (Young, 2003) was utilized. Results from the study indicate older students’ attitudes towards recreational reading (in primary school) are not significantly different to younger students’ attitudes. Female students however, show more positive attitudes to recreational reading than male students. Older students’ attitudes towards academic reading are more negative overall and female students showed significantly more positive attitudes than their male peers. Students’ choice of texts varied across the year levels with the most preferred reading materials being chapter books, children’s magazines and comics. Teachers’ perceptions of students’ enjoyment of reading in class correlated significantly with students’ own perceived level of reading achievement. Teachers perceive that as students’ level of reading enjoyment increases, their level of academic reading achievement also increases. Five recommendations are made from the findings of this study. First, recreational reading engagement needs to be publicly promoted and positively celebrated within the school community. It was found that for students to be motivated and see the value of engaging in reading they must be immersed in a school classroom environment that offers a range of recreational activities and opportunities. Second, a structured approach to literacy sessions (literacy block) needs to be established and implemented with students across all primary year levels. This enables students to be scaffolded in their literacy learning and so develop positive attitudes towards themselves as academic readers. Third, it is recommended that guided reading occur as a key instructional approach to the teaching of reading across all primary year levels. This may serve to increase students’ motivation and interest in reading a range of text types and may provide a source of information for the teacher in relation to students’ engagement with reading. Fourth, a range of text types need to be purchased and made available for students to read independently and for teachers to use in class shared reading activities across all primary year levels. Students should be exposed to various text types throughout their primary years of schooling. Finally, the teaching of reading needs to be ‘data-driven’ rather than based on teachers’ perceptions of students’ reading needs. Periodic assessments of students’ reading achievement should occur to provide these data for teachers. The recommendations from this study align with priorities and recommendations included in current Commonwealth and State documents. Directions for future research also are suggested especially for qualitative data collection. This methodology, if included, would glean more in-depth data concerning students’ attitudes to reading and the perceptions held by their teachers. Investigating students’ attitude towards and use of digital literacies also would provide a greater understanding of primary-age students’ attitudes towards reading in the 21st century.
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What does it mean to be a learning support teacher? : a life-history investigation of ten learning support teachers in the east-coast of Ireland.Day, Therese. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (EdD)--Open University.
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The progymnasmata : new/old ways to teach reading, writing, and thinking in secondary schools /Baxter, Natalie Sue, January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.)--Brigham Young University. Dept. of English, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 157-162).
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A study of the integration of literature and communicative language teachingHirvela, Alan January 1993 (has links)
Since the early 1980s, attitudes toward literature in English language teaching (ELT) have undergone two major changes. First, after a long period in which literature was essentially excluded from ELT, it began to be seen in a more favourable light. Second, literature began to be viewed more as a tool in ELT, rather than as the end towards which ELT students should be led. These changes in attitude have led to a surge of interest in literature in ELT, particularly in the context of Communicative language teaching (CLT). This study examines, in several ways, the nature and the extent of this renewed interest in literature. The study explores the evolution of these changes, and puts them in perspective by creating various classifications for current types of approaches to literature in ELT and CLT. It also investigates the degree to which interest in literature in ELT has moved from research and scholarship to actual practice among teachers. In addition, it attempts to extend literature's applications in CLT by experimenting with the use of literature in a domain of CLT generally regarded as unsuited to literature-based teaching: English for Specific Purposes (ESP). The study also offers a series of proposals through which further integration of literature and CLT can take place.
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The effects of a middle school corrective reading intervention on high school passage rate /Kalisek, Anne Marie. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ed. D.)--University of La Verne, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 142-147).
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The effects of a middle school corrective reading intervention on high school passage rate /Kalisek, Anne Marie. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ed. D.)--University of La Verne, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 142-147).
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Case studies of four teachers the openness of the tasks they implement, the adaptations they make, and the rationales they offer for adapting /Parsons, Seth Arthur. January 1900 (has links)
Dissertation (Ph.D.)--The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, 2008. / Title from PDF t.p. (viewed Jun. 2, 2009). Advisor: Gerald Duffy; submitted to the School of Education. Includes bibliographical references (p. 121-130).
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