| Louisa Moats  - LETRS  Story1 #321934 Louisa Moats talks about how close reading serves as a catalyst for developing the foundational language skills that allow young learners to meet and exceed early literacy standards. | 
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- CitatenVoeg citaat toeList by: CiterankMap| Link[5] The Missing Foundation in Teacher Education: Knowledge of the Structure of Spoken and Written Language 
 Citerend uit: Louisa Moats
 Publication info: 1994, Annals of Dyslexia, Vol. 44
 Geciteerd door: David Price 10:12 PM 28 March 2014 GMT
 Citerank: (1) 319421Dyslexia Resources565CA4D9
 URL:
 
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| Fragment- Reading research supports the necessity for directly teaching concepts about linguistic structure to beginning readers and to  students with reading and spelling difficulties.In this study, experienced teachers of reading, language arts, and special education  were tested to determine if they have the requisite awareness of language elements (e.g., phonemes, morphemes) and of how these elements are represented in writing (e.g., knowledge of sound-symbol  correspondences). The results were surprisingly poor, indicating  that even motivated and experienced teachers typically understand  too little about spoken and written language structure to be able to  provide sufficient instruction in these areas. The utility of  language structure knowledge for instructional planning, for assessment of student progress, and for remediation of literacy problems is discussed.
 The teachers participating in the study subsequently took a  course focusing on phonemic awareness training, spoken-written language relationships, and careful analysis of spelling and reading behavior in children. At the end of the course, the teachers  judged this information to be essential for teaching and advised  that it become a prerequisite for certification. Recommendations  for requirements and content of teacher education programs are  presented.
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