Phonological sensitivity as a proximal contributor to phonological recoding skills in children's reading


Autoria(s): Bowey, JA
Data(s)

01/01/1996

Resumo

Because it permits self-teaching, phonological recoding (the efficient translation of letters or letter groups into sound) is arguably the key skill acquired in learning to read an alphabetic writing system. Deficits in this skill are the most common source of children's reading difficulties. In addition, poor readers tend to perform at a lower level than good readers on a wide variety of phonological processing tasks. These findings have been widely interpreted as implying a latent phonological processing ability as a distal cause of variation in reading skill. Clearly, such an interpretation does not imply that all phonological processing skills contribute directly to the phonological recoding process. This paper outlines a series of studies conducted at the University of Queensland. This work consistently suggests that children's phonological sensitivity contributes more directly than other phonological processing abilities to the development of phonological recoding skills.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:57427

Idioma(s)

eng

Palavras-Chave #Psychology, Multidisciplinary #Developmental Dyslexia #Processing Abilities #Remediation Program #Phonemic Awareness #Beginning Readers #Word Perception #Naming Speed #Acquisition #Memory #Difficulties
Tipo

Journal Article