Author:
THOMPSON G. BRIAN,FLETCHER-FLINN CLAIRE M.,COTTRELL DAVID S.
Abstract
Three studies examined the sources of
learning by which children, very early in learning to read, formed correspondences between
letters and phonemes when these were not explicitly taught in the whole language instruction
they received. There were three classes of predicted knowledge sources: (a) induced sublexical
relations (i.e., induction of orthographic–phonological relations from the experience of
print words), (b) acrophones from letter names, and (c) transfer from spelling experience. The
results of Study 1 indicated that children used both sources (a) and (b). Study 2 results showed
that source (a) dominated when the letters were initial components of pseudowords rather than
isolated items. The transfer from phoneme-to-grapheme correspondences of the children's
spelling was examined in Study 3. The results were not consistent with the use of source (c). The
findings of these studies have implications for the question of how early in learning to read
children are able to use knowledge from their experience of print words as a source for
phonological recoding.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Psychology,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Cited by
43 articles.
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