1st Edition

Reading Development in Adults A Special Issue of scientific Studies of Reading

Edited By Richard L. Venezky, John P. Sabatini Copyright 2002
    104 Pages
    by Routledge

    This special issue is a snapshot of current research in this area, showing many of the issues encountered, the methods employed, and the limitations faced. All four studies involve experimental or quasi-experimental studies but all are based on participants recruited from adult literacy programs. Together these studies illuminate many of the gray areas of adult basic processing, particularly for adults in basic skills programs. They present many of the complexities of studying how literacy adults: the high percentages with learning disabilities, the differences across native and non-native English speakers and within classes of the latter, the different processing abilities of adults and children matched for reading ability, the impacts of language and orthography on reading strategies, and the importance of measure speed, as well as accuracy in studying basic processing. As such, the present studies are an indication that scientific programs exist and are at work on key issues.

    Volume 6, Number 3, 2002. Contents: R.L. Venezky, J.P. Sabatini, Introduction to This Special Issue of Scientific Studies of Reading: Reading Development in Adults. D. Greenberg, L.C. Ehri, D. Perin, Do Adult Literacy Students Make the Same Word Reading and Spelling Errors as Children Matched for Word Reading Age? A.Y, Durgunoglu, B. Öney, Phonological Awareness in Literacy Development: It's Not Only for Children. J.P. Sabatini, Efficiency in Word Reading of Adults: Ability Group Comparisons. R.K. Davidson, J. Strucker, Patterns of Word Recognition Errors Among ABE and ASE Students.

    Biography

    Richard L. Venezky, John P. Sabatini