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In many multilingual societies, and especially those with colonial pasts, the choice of school languages is problematic. The colonial experience leaves a linguistic legacy – a colonial language which is often positively regarded since it is the language of a political or economic elite, the medium of instruction at the tertiary level, or because it is promoted by such elites as a vehicle of desirable, often western-styled, modernization. It is of course true that not all colonial languages are kept on after independence is gained –Dutch was rather quickly phased out in Indonesia – but in such situations another exogenous language is often found necessary. Thus in many newly independent countries, in Southeast Asia and elsewhere, languages like English, French, Spanish and Dutch have significant educational relevance. 相似文献
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Some previous research has shown strong associations between spelling ability and rapid automatic naming (RAN) after controls for phonological processing and nonsense-word reading ability, consistent with the double-deficit hypothesis in reading and spelling. Previous studies did not, however, control for nonsense-word spelling ability before assessing RAN--spelling associations. In this study, 65 children with poor spelling skills but average reasoning ability completed RAN tasks and spelling, reading, and reasoning tasks. Hierarchical regression analyses revealed that, after controls for chronological age, reasoning ability, and spelling of nonsense words, alphanumeric RAN, but not nonalphanumeric RAN, was still a strong predictor of spelling acquisition. Findings are discussed in terms of single- and double-deficit models of spelling and implications for effective teaching. 相似文献
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Interchange - With frequent curriculum changes in South Africa since 1994, educational standards and learner performance has been progressing at a slow pace. The role of the principal’s... 相似文献
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Working Memory and Reading Difficulties: What We Know and What We Don’t Know About the Relationship 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
This paper examines the role of Working Memory (WM) in developmental reading problems, considering: 1) The operationalization
of WM; 2) The unique contribution of WM to reading; 3) Domain-general or -specific explanations of decoding and reading comprehension
deficits; and 4) The capacity of WM constructs to distinguish between reading disabilities and attention-deficit/hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD). It is concluded that: 1) Significant problems operationalizing working memory measures remain; 2) No clear
unique role for WM is evident in longitudinal studies of reading acquisition; 3) Existing evidence concerning the domain-specificity
or generality of WM problems is hard to interpret given problems in identification and sampling of poor readers and operationalization
of WM constructs; 4) Further work is required to specify the nature of WM problems in samples of poor readers, as distinct
from other co-occurring problems such as ADHD. Additional research is suggested to address these issues more fully. 相似文献
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