Abstract

There is consistent empirical support that demonstrates the relationship between phonological deficits of developmental dyslexics and their reading difficulties. However, the morphological skills—which also play an important role in the development of alphabetic writing—are seldom investigated among children and adolescents with dyslexia. The focus of this study was to analyse reading patterns according to the dual route model and verify the performance of each subtype of dyslexic in tests of morphological awareness. Participants were nine students classified as surface or phonological dyslexics through their performance in an isolated words-reading task. Four tests were applied to the participants to assess their knowledge of derivational morphology, and two tests focused on their knowledge of inflectional morphology. The hypothesis that guided this research was that students with different reading patterns would also present different performances on morphological tests. This hypothesis was confirmed only for derivational morphology, in which a higher performance was observed among participants with phonological dyslexia. It is concluded that metamorphological skills may serve as facilitators of reading in students with developmental dyslexia, and a focus on the development of these skills is suggested as a strategy to promote the reading skills of these students.

Highlights

  • Despite the prominent studies focused on phonological awareness in students with developmental dyslexiaHow to cite this paper: Guimarães, S

  • Two students (BPT and PHL) present better than average scores in reading invented, with slightly higher scores in comparison to the other participants. They present superior performance in reading regular words in comparison to their reading of irregular words. These results suggest that these two students use preferably the sublexical route, the characteristic reading pattern used by individuals with surface dyslexia

  • The analysis of the performance of participants suggested that this hypothesis was partially confirmed, considering that students with phonological dyslexia reading patterns performed better than those with surface dyslexia reading patterns, but only in tasks of derivational morphology

Read more

Summary

Introduction

How to cite this paper: Guimarães, S. Investigating the role of morphological consciousness in improving reading and writing among children and adolescents with developmental dyslexia is shown as an important and necessary research agenda in the various alphabetic languages It is in this context that this study is proposed, with the purpose of identifying the reading procedure used preferentially by participants (participants with reading patterns of phonological and surface dyslexia), examining a possible relation between reading patterns and performance on tasks assessing morphological awareness (inflectional and derivational). It was hypothesized that the performance of participants on tasks assessing morphological awareness (tasks of derivational and inflectional morphology) would be associated with its reading pattern

Participants
Instruments
Evaluation of Morphological Awareness Tasks
Procedures
The Reading Test of Isolated Words
Morphological Consciousness
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call