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Teaching directional skills to preschool and kindergarten children
Authors:Graham M. Sterritt   Professor  
Affiliation:

a Graduate Program in Psychology University of Colorado at Denver 1100 Fourteenth Street, Denver, Colorado 80202, USA

b Children Inc.4710 Lynnacre Drive, Dallas, Texas 75211, USA

c California Department of Education 721 Capital Mall, Sacramento, California 95814, USA

Abstract:Studied a new device and training procedure for teaching the directional orientation and sentence tracking skills used in reading and writing western languages. Twelve preschool and 14 kindergarten children were randomly assigned to E and C groups. Between pre- and posttests, Es practiced for a total of 20 min. over a two-week period with an electronic device which flashed a correct signal only when S scribed left-to-right through successive sentences from top to bottom of the display. Any error in sequence extinguished the signal. Cs received only pre- and posttests. On test sentences prior to practice neither Es nor Cs were able to show where the sentences began or how they went from beginning to end. After using the device, Es tripled their orientation and tracking scores, while Cs not given access to the device did not improve (p < .002). Left-right and up-down directional confusion, often the subject of many hours of remedial training, were shown to be rapidly corrected in normal children by the use of a simple electronic device providing clear feedback distinguishing correct from incorrect responses. Implications for prereading instruction are discussed.
Keywords:
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