Reading Horizons, Volume 28Psycho-Educational Clinic and the Western Michigan University Chapter of the International Reading Association, Kalamazoo, Mich., 1987 Reading Horizons began in 1960 by Dorothy J. McGinnis as a local reading education newsletter and developed into an international journal serving reading educators and researchers. Major colleges, universities, and individuals subscribe to Reading Horizons across the United States, Canada and a host of other countries. Dedicated to adding to the growing body of knowledge in literacy, the quarterly journal welcomes new and current research, theoretical essays, opinion pieces, policy studies, and best literacy practices. As a peer-reviewed publication, Reading Horizons endeavors to bring school professionals, literacy researchers, teacher educators, parents, and community leaders together in a collaborative community to widen literacy and language arts horizons. |
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Pagina 5
... play or simple improvi- sation in that it has a form with a beginning , middle , and end . The dialogue is always created by the players , whether the content is taken from a story , poem , or chapter of a book . " ( Huck , 1979 , p ...
... play or simple improvi- sation in that it has a form with a beginning , middle , and end . The dialogue is always created by the players , whether the content is taken from a story , poem , or chapter of a book . " ( Huck , 1979 , p ...
Pagina 6
... play in increasing reading achievement . Scores on the Gates - McGinitie Reading Test were signifi- cantly higher for children who used play to rehearse story passages than for those in the control group . As a result of a review of ...
... play in increasing reading achievement . Scores on the Gates - McGinitie Reading Test were signifi- cantly higher for children who used play to rehearse story passages than for those in the control group . As a result of a review of ...
Pagina 235
... play , b ) recognizing different points of view , and c ) evaluating the author's ability to relate to her audience . Word Play In This Place Has No Atmosphere ... play to play with language as she introduces unusual names for people , foods.
... play , b ) recognizing different points of view , and c ) evaluating the author's ability to relate to her audience . Word Play In This Place Has No Atmosphere ... play to play with language as she introduces unusual names for people , foods.
Inhoudsopgave
Creative Dramatics | 5 |
Evaluating Computer Books With | 12 |
The Introduction of Social Studies Vocabulary | 26 |
Copyright | |
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activities Augusta College basal reader beginning CALIFORNIA/RIVERSIDE The University child children's literature classroom teachers Cognitive Cognitive Psychology diagnostic direct explanation discussion DOG BREED DRWL Durkin effective evaluation expository gifted readers gifted students grade level grid identified Informal reading inventories interest Kalamazoo Katharine D language lesson letters main idea names narrative Newark parents passages Patti Boyd PFS:File phonics poor readers practice problem solving psychology raters readability reading ability reading activities reading and writing reading comprehension READING HORIZONS reading instruction reading program reading research course Reading Research Quarterly reading skill reading specialist Reading Teacher repeated readings reports responses semantic feature analysis sentence sequence skill instruction story grammar story structure strategies Teaching Reading text structure text type tion Tom Swifty Univ University Library UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/RIVERSIDE vocabulary Western Michigan University Yes Yes Yes