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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ramirez, Rhoda L.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1981
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED256537
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author Ramirez, Rhoda L.
author_facet Ramirez, Rhoda L.
Ramirez, Rhoda L.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Venezuela--The Teaching of Reading in Rural Schools. Ramirez, Rhoda L. Access to Education Class Size Classroom Environment Educational Change Elementary Education Foreign Countries Library Services Public Schools Reading Comprehension Reading Difficulties Reading Instruction Reading Material Selection Reading Skills Rural Schools Student Attrition Teacher Education Teacher Effectiveness Teaching Styles Urban Schools Direct interviews with 17 teachers and observation in 31 rural and urban Venezuelan classrooms (pre-school through grade 6 in nine schools) across 3 states revealed serious reading difficulties among Venezuelan students. Small rooms and multi-grade class situations were common and school supplies and equipment were scarce. Even more scarce were academic materials such as books, worksheets, and kits. Libraries were found to be highly inadequate, often providing limited varieties of texts and usually no additional equipment. Student competence in reading was examined through teacher constructed exams or by having the student read aloud. Children were most typically taught reading skills first by memorizing vowel sounds. Next they were taught consonants, syllables, words, sentences and, finally, short stories. Only one instructor was found who emphasized words first, then consonants, then vowels. By fifth and sixth grade, reading was not a subject and students were expected to read from subject-specific texts with no further reading instruction. New teacher education legislation should help to improve matters. Consideration should be given to the provision of auxillary personnel, and emphasis should be given to meaning-centered instruction. Also, better materials, smaller class sizes, and more efficient time usage should be considered. Finally, parent interest should be harnessed. (PM)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED256537
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1981
record_format eric
spellingShingle Venezuela--The Teaching of Reading in Rural Schools.
Ramirez, Rhoda L.
Access to Education
Class Size
Classroom Environment
Educational Change
Elementary Education
Foreign Countries
Library Services
Public Schools
Reading Comprehension
Reading Difficulties
Reading Instruction
Reading Material Selection
Reading Skills
Rural Schools
Student Attrition
Teacher Education
Teacher Effectiveness
Teaching Styles
Urban Schools
Venezuela--The Teaching of Reading in Rural Schools. Ramirez, Rhoda L. Access to Education Class Size Classroom Environment Educational Change Elementary Education Foreign Countries Library Services Public Schools Reading Comprehension Reading Difficulties Reading Instruction Reading Material Selection Reading Skills Rural Schools Student Attrition Teacher Education Teacher Effectiveness Teaching Styles Urban Schools Direct interviews with 17 teachers and observation in 31 rural and urban Venezuelan classrooms (pre-school through grade 6 in nine schools) across 3 states revealed serious reading difficulties among Venezuelan students. Small rooms and multi-grade class situations were common and school supplies and equipment were scarce. Even more scarce were academic materials such as books, worksheets, and kits. Libraries were found to be highly inadequate, often providing limited varieties of texts and usually no additional equipment. Student competence in reading was examined through teacher constructed exams or by having the student read aloud. Children were most typically taught reading skills first by memorizing vowel sounds. Next they were taught consonants, syllables, words, sentences and, finally, short stories. Only one instructor was found who emphasized words first, then consonants, then vowels. By fifth and sixth grade, reading was not a subject and students were expected to read from subject-specific texts with no further reading instruction. New teacher education legislation should help to improve matters. Consideration should be given to the provision of auxillary personnel, and emphasis should be given to meaning-centered instruction. Also, better materials, smaller class sizes, and more efficient time usage should be considered. Finally, parent interest should be harnessed. (PM)
title Venezuela--The Teaching of Reading in Rural Schools.
topic Access to Education
Class Size
Classroom Environment
Educational Change
Elementary Education
Foreign Countries
Library Services
Public Schools
Reading Comprehension
Reading Difficulties
Reading Instruction
Reading Material Selection
Reading Skills
Rural Schools
Student Attrition
Teacher Education
Teacher Effectiveness
Teaching Styles
Urban Schools
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED256537