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Carolyn Chaney

Researcher at San Francisco State University

Publications -  9
Citations -  640

Carolyn Chaney is an academic researcher from San Francisco State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Metalinguistic awareness & Phonological awareness. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 9 publications receiving 629 citations.

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Language development, metalinguistic skills, and print awareness in 3-year-old children

TL;DR: The authors investigated the relationship among selected aspects of normal language development, emerging metalinguistic skills, and concepts about print in 3-year-old children, and found that most 3year-olds can make meta-level judgments and productions in structured tasks.
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Language development, metalinguistic awareness, and emergent literacy skills of 3-year-old children in relation to social class

TL;DR: This paper investigated the relationship among selected aspects of normal language development, emerging metalinguistic skills, concepts about print, and family literacy experiences in 3-year-old children who vary in their socioeconomic backgrounds.
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Preschool language and metalinguistic skills are links to reading success

TL;DR: In a longitudinal follow-up of 41 preschool children as they moved into reading, this article reported that the children were 3 years old when they participated in a detailed assessment of their language, print, and metalinguistic skills.
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I pledge a legiance tothe flag: Three studies in word segmentation

TL;DR: The authors found that children who had begun to read performed better overall than their same-age peers who had not, and their segmentation scores increased with age; even the 4½-to 5-year-olds were highly successful, segmenting with 60% accuracy, and by age 6-6½, they were correctly segmenting 75% of the phrases.
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Evaluating the Whole Language Approach to Language Arts

TL;DR: Whole language as mentioned in this paper is an approach to teaching written language that focuses on the oral language experiences of the child, and the communication of meaning through print, rather than emphasizing the text.