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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Schaudt, Barbara A.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1983
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED240544
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author Schaudt, Barbara A.
author_facet Schaudt, Barbara A.
Schaudt, Barbara A.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Relationship between Listening and Reading: A Historical Survey. Schaudt, Barbara A. Content Analysis Curriculum Development Curriculum Guides Educational Needs Educational Trends Elementary Secondary Education English Curriculum Instructional Materials Language Arts Listening Listening Skills Literature Reviews Reading Comprehension Research Needs Textbook Content An overview of the literature of listening illustrates the lack of sufficient research in this area. A 1955 survey of curriculum guidebooks and bulletins for the inclusion of listening demonstrates the effect of limited research: most documents devoted anywhere from two to six pages to listening in elementary through secondary school levels. In another survey of 7,762 curriculum documents included in the ERIC datafiles, only 4.5% mentioned listening for various grade level clusters, and a close inspection of curricular materials housed at the 1980 Curriculum Development Library reveals considerable differences between the treatment of listening and the treatment of the other language arts. The attitudes underlying these differences may be reflected in the documents themselves. For example, the inclusion of listening appeared to be an afterthought in some of the material. Many documents also treated listening in vaguer terms than other language arts. In a final example of the lack of attention given to listening, several documents included the significance of listening in their philosophy statement, but few visibly reinforced this goal. Because research indicates that listening comprehension augments reading comprehension, it is becoming increasingly important for professional educators to incorporate listening skill development into the curriculum. (HOD)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED240544
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1983
record_format eric
spellingShingle Relationship between Listening and Reading: A Historical Survey.
Schaudt, Barbara A.
Content Analysis
Curriculum Development
Curriculum Guides
Educational Needs
Educational Trends
Elementary Secondary Education
English Curriculum
Instructional Materials
Language Arts
Listening
Listening Skills
Literature Reviews
Reading Comprehension
Research Needs
Textbook Content
Relationship between Listening and Reading: A Historical Survey. Schaudt, Barbara A. Content Analysis Curriculum Development Curriculum Guides Educational Needs Educational Trends Elementary Secondary Education English Curriculum Instructional Materials Language Arts Listening Listening Skills Literature Reviews Reading Comprehension Research Needs Textbook Content An overview of the literature of listening illustrates the lack of sufficient research in this area. A 1955 survey of curriculum guidebooks and bulletins for the inclusion of listening demonstrates the effect of limited research: most documents devoted anywhere from two to six pages to listening in elementary through secondary school levels. In another survey of 7,762 curriculum documents included in the ERIC datafiles, only 4.5% mentioned listening for various grade level clusters, and a close inspection of curricular materials housed at the 1980 Curriculum Development Library reveals considerable differences between the treatment of listening and the treatment of the other language arts. The attitudes underlying these differences may be reflected in the documents themselves. For example, the inclusion of listening appeared to be an afterthought in some of the material. Many documents also treated listening in vaguer terms than other language arts. In a final example of the lack of attention given to listening, several documents included the significance of listening in their philosophy statement, but few visibly reinforced this goal. Because research indicates that listening comprehension augments reading comprehension, it is becoming increasingly important for professional educators to incorporate listening skill development into the curriculum. (HOD)
title Relationship between Listening and Reading: A Historical Survey.
topic Content Analysis
Curriculum Development
Curriculum Guides
Educational Needs
Educational Trends
Elementary Secondary Education
English Curriculum
Instructional Materials
Language Arts
Listening
Listening Skills
Literature Reviews
Reading Comprehension
Research Needs
Textbook Content
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED240544