1958
DOI: 10.1177/002205745814000303
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Chapter III: Growth in Word Perception Abilities as it Relates to Success in Beginning Reading

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Cited by 19 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Letter-name knowledge measured before school entry has proven repeatedly to be one of the best predictors of reading achievement at the end of first grade, better even than IQ or self-reports of parents' reading to their children (Chall, 1967;Durrell, 1958;Olson, 1958;Share, Jorm, Maclean, & Matthews, 1984). Studies of young children who learned to read at home before kindergarten usually mention that letters were mastered before the children started reading words independently (Bissex, 1980;Healy, 1982;Lass, 1982).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Letter-name knowledge measured before school entry has proven repeatedly to be one of the best predictors of reading achievement at the end of first grade, better even than IQ or self-reports of parents' reading to their children (Chall, 1967;Durrell, 1958;Olson, 1958;Share, Jorm, Maclean, & Matthews, 1984). Studies of young children who learned to read at home before kindergarten usually mention that letters were mastered before the children started reading words independently (Bissex, 1980;Healy, 1982;Lass, 1982).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a study by Olson (1958) of the reading and reading-related skills of 1,172 first grade children, letter-naming ability n September correlated highly with oral reading ability in February. Furthermore, it was found that of the 119 children from this group who could not name 20 or more letters in February, only nine could identify 70 or more words in a word recognition task.…”
Section: Classroom Evaluationmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…In a study by Nicholson (1958) Among those who favor the early introduction of letter names in reading instruction, there is little agreement on the specific benefits of this practice. One argument centers on attaching sounds to letters (Durrell, 1958); a second on the facilitation of letter discrimination (Fries, 1962), and a third on word identification (Olson, 1958;Muehl, 1962). In this section the experimental data relevant to the general area of naming will be surveyed, followed by discussions of the evidence for and against the three positions just mentioned.…”
Section: Semantic and Phonological Featuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…lluda (169) Investigating the relationship between growth in word perception and success in beginning reading, 0/8on (180) found that letter knowledge has a positive relationship to reading achievement.…”
Section: Vocabularymentioning
confidence: 99%