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| Reading Horizons | 5 |
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| Altieri, Jennifer L. | 5 |
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| Reports - Research | 5 |
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Showing all 5 results
Altieri, Jennifer L. – Reading Horizons, 2007
This study examined children's and adolescent trade books portraying school-age characters with dyslexia. All of the books are contemporary realistic fiction, geared to elementary and adolescent readers, and published in the United States between 1993 and 2003. After an extensive search, seventy-two books were located. An analysis of the…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Adolescent Literature, Fiction, Literary Devices
Peer reviewedAltieri, Jennifer L. – Reading Horizons, 2000
Looks at the literacy practices of a Catholic home schooling group located in the United States Pacific Northwest. Finds that reading aloud was important to all parents. Notes some benefits cited by parents including immediate feedback for children, ability to pace themselves as necessary, and the opportunity to tailor lessons to individual…
Descriptors: Catholics, Elementary Education, Home Schooling, Literacy
Peer reviewedAltieri, Jennifer L. – Reading Horizons, 1998
Examines a first-grade, rural school teacher's use of a newly adopted literature-based basal reading series over the course of one year. Finds that the teacher had a positive attitude toward the new series and believed that she had changed her methods and beliefs of teaching reading. Shows that in fact she modified the materials to meet her…
Descriptors: Basal Reading, Classroom Research, Grade 1, Higher Education
Peer reviewedAltieri, Jennifer L. – Reading Horizons, 1997
Surveys all 11 teachers in one rural setting to determine complexities surrounding literature use in that school. Finds the basal played a predominant role in classrooms--only the Chapter I teacher used literature during reading. Finds that "textbooks" were important for teachers and that trade books did not figure much in instruction. (PA)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Reading Instruction
Peer reviewedAltieri, Jennifer L. – Reading Horizons, 1993
Examines the written responses of Hispanic, African-American and Caucasian elementary students after listening to various African-American stories to see whether engagement with text is related to student's ethnicity. Finds that students were equally capable of engagement in the African-American stories regardless of their ethnicity. (RS)
Descriptors: Black Literature, Ethnicity, Primary Education, Reader Response

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