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Related Experiment Videos

Visual phonics: an English code buster?

M Lynn Woolsey1, Susan T Satterfield, Len Roberson

  • 1Center on Deafness, University of Tennessee, Knoxville , USA.

American Annals of the Deaf
|January 18, 2007
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

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Visual phonics aids children with hearing loss in developing phonemic awareness and sound-letter skills. Further research is needed to establish its effectiveness and close the research-practice gap.

Area of Science:

  • Education
  • Speech-Language Pathology
  • Linguistics

Background:

  • Children with hearing loss often struggle with phonemic awareness, impacting reading and spelling.
  • Visual phonics is an instructional program designed to address these challenges.
  • The program aims to clarify the sound-symbol relationship in spoken English and print.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To evaluate the effectiveness of Visual Phonics for children with hearing loss.
  • To highlight the need for empirical research on this widely implemented program.

Main Methods:

  • The abstract does not detail specific research methods.
  • It notes that Visual Phonics can be learned through a 2-day workshop.

Main Results:

Related Experiment Videos

  • Visual Phonics is implemented in numerous school districts, particularly in California and Florida.
  • Educators and speech pathologists anticipate benefits for students' reading and spelling achievement.

Conclusions:

  • Visual Phonics has a significant lack of empirical research supporting its effectiveness.
  • There is a critical need for researchers, teachers, and speech pathologists to conduct studies.
  • Closing the research-to-practice gap is essential for validating and improving interventions for students with hearing loss.