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Key Phonics and Phonemic Awareness Studies in the NRP Report (page 2)

By D. W. Carnine|J. Silbert|E. J. Kame'enui|S. G. Tarver
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall

Another important study (O'Connor, Jenkins, & Slocum, 1995) examined the effectiveness of focused rather than broad phonological awareness training. In the broad treatment, children performed a variety of sound manipulation activities that included isolating, segmenting, blending, and deleting phonemes; segmenting and blending syllables and onset-rime units; and working with rhyming words. The focused treatment was focused on the segmenting and blending of onsets, rimes, and phonemes. A control group received only letter-sound instruction. Comparisons showed that the focused and broad training were equally effective in teaching phonemic awareness; however, the focused training contributed more to the reading of words. The findings of this study are consistent with the NRP's conclusion that segmenting and blending have a greater impact on reading outcomes than does multiskill phonemic awareness instruction.

Castle, Riach, and Nicholson (1994) examined the effects of adding phonemic awareness training to whole language instruction for kindergarteners with low phonemic awareness. Phonemic awareness training consisted of segmentation, blending, substitution, deletion, and letters during the latter part of the training. The results showed that adding phonemic awareness instruction to the whole language program enhanced students' decoding of pseudowords and spelling skills but not their other reading skills. These findings, when considered in concert with the highly positive findings of the two comprehensive studies by Blachman et al. (1999) and Torgesen et al. (1999) that were described above, suggest that add-on phonemic awareness instruction is of limited benefit unless it is added to systematic and explicit phonics instruction.

Foorman, Francis, Fletcher, Scharschneider and Mehta (1998) reported a dramatic reduction in overall failure rate of children based on the percentage of children remaining below the 30th percentile for children taught direct instruction in phonemic awareness and letter-sound correspondences practiced in controlled vocabulary text.

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