Lexical and Nonlexical Routes

Author:

Beech John R.1,Awaida May2

Affiliation:

1. John R. Beech, PhD, is a lecturer in psychology at the University of Leicester, United Kingdom. He is a Fellow of the British Psychological Society and Treasurer of its Cognitive Section. He is also Series Editor of the NFER-Nelson Assessment Library. He has been a university lecturer for 18 years. Address: John R. Beech, Psychology Department, University of Leicester, University Road, Leicester, LE1 7RH, United Kingdom.

2. May Awaida, BA, MA, received her BA and teaching diploma from the American University of Beirut and her MA in speech sciences at the University of Leeds. She is currently a doctoral student in psychology at the University of Leicester.

Abstract

This study investigated qualitative differences in poor readers relative to normally achieving readers of the same reading level. Thirty-eight 9-year-old poor readers and forty 7- and 8-year-old reading-age-matched normally achieving readers from the United Kingdom were matched in phonemic processing and then given tests of memory span and visual discrimination of letterlike characters, were required to read different word types (regular, exception, and pseudoword), and were asked to complete a homophonic pseudoword test. The poor readers were worse at reading pseudowords compared to the controls, but this difference was unrelated to phonemic length or number of letters, or to the ease of producing analogies for the pseudowords. The results suggest that although there are no differences with reading-age controls in phonological processing, poor readers have worse grapheme-phoneme conversion skills and greater reluctance to relinquish the lexical route when appropriate. The results also showed that poor readers were slightly better at visual discrimination but had poorer memory spans.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Health Professions,Education,Health(social science)

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