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Becoming literate : the construction of inner control / Marie M. Clay.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Auckland [N.Z.] : Heinemann, 1991Description: 366 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0868632791
  • 9780868632797
  • 0435085743
  • 9780435085742
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 418.4019 20
LOC classification:
  • LB1525 .C57 1991
Contents:
A framework of issues -- Literacy before schooling -- School entry: a transition -- Oral language support for early literacy -- Introducing children to print at school -- Attention and the twin puzzles of test reading: serial order and hierarchical order -- Attention to conepts about print -- Problem-solving using information of more than one kind -- Choosing texts: contrived texts, story book texts and transitional texts -- Progress on the first reading books -- Behaviours signal a developing inner control -- Visual perception strategies: one kind of inner control -- The development of processing strategies -- Extending the inner control.
Summary: Children are taught about stories, words, letters and sounds in many different programmes in their first years of literacy instruction. In this book Clay argues that underlying the progress of successful children there is another level of competencies being learned. Successful readers show a gradual control over how a reader or writer can work with print even though they learn in very different programmes. This inner strategic control is what failing readers do not seem to build.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

A framework of issues -- Literacy before schooling -- School entry: a transition -- Oral language support for early literacy -- Introducing children to print at school -- Attention and the twin puzzles of test reading: serial order and hierarchical order -- Attention to conepts about print -- Problem-solving using information of more than one kind -- Choosing texts: contrived texts, story book texts and transitional texts -- Progress on the first reading books -- Behaviours signal a developing inner control -- Visual perception strategies: one kind of inner control -- The development of processing strategies -- Extending the inner control.

Children are taught about stories, words, letters and sounds in many different programmes in their first years of literacy instruction. In this book Clay argues that underlying the progress of successful children there is another level of competencies being learned. Successful readers show a gradual control over how a reader or writer can work with print even though they learn in very different programmes. This inner strategic control is what failing readers do not seem to build.

Machine converted from AACR2 source record.

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