About 3,770 results
Open links in new tab
  1. What is the best way to teach children to read? - NICHD

    The panel found that specific instruction in the major parts of reading (phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension) is the best approach to teaching most …

  2. Teaching with letters is important because this helps children apply their PA skills to reading and writing. Teaching children to blend phonemes with letters helps them decode.

  3. Sight-word programs that begin by teaching children a sight-word reading vocabulary of from 50 to 100 words. Only after they learn to read these words do children receive instruction in the …

  4. National Reading Panel (Historical/For Reference Only)

    The combination of practice and feedback promotes reading fluency. Teaching vocabulary words —teaching new words, either as they appear in text or by introducing new words separately. …

  5. Report of the National Reading Panel - NICHD

    Teaching Children to Read Findings and Determinations of the National Reading Panel by Topic Areas Alphabetics Phonemic Awareness Instruction Phonemes are the smallest units …

  6. National Reading Panel Publications | NICHD - NICHD - Eunice …

    In 1997, Congress convened the National Reading Panel to assess the effectiveness of different approaches used to teach children to read. The panel was made up of 14 people, including …

  7. As the National Reading Panel (NRP) began its analysis of the extant research data on reading comprehension, three predominant themes emerged: (1) reading comprehension is a cognitive …

  8. What important gaps remain in our knowledge of how children learn to read, the effectiveness of different instructional methods for teaching reading, and improving the preparation of teachers …

  9. Background Reading comprehension strategy instruction has been a major research topic for more than 20 years. The idea behind this approach to instruction is that reading …

  10. Introduction Although reading is based on the technology of writing and printing, the history of reading instruction reflects a recurrent interest in the application of other technologies, for …