Abstract
It is not known how effective specific types of motor-enriched activities are at improving academic learning and early reading skills in children. The aim of this study was to investigate whether fine or gross motor enrichment during a single session of recognizing letters “b”/“d” can improve within-session performance or delayed retention the following day in comparison to letter recognition practice without movement. Furthermore, the aim was to investigate children’s motivation to perform the specific tasks. We used a randomized controlled intervention study-design to investigate the effect of 10-min motor-enriched “b”/“d” letter training on children’s ability to recognize the letters “b” and “d” (n = 127, mean age = 7.61 ± SD = 0.44 years) acutely, and in a delayed retention test. Three groups were included: a fine motor-enriched group (FME), a gross motor-enriched group (GME), that received 10 min of “b” and “d” training with enriched gestures (fine or gross motor movements, respectively), and a control group (CON), which received non motor-enriched “b”/“d” training. The children’s ability to recognize “b” and “d” were tested before (T0), immediately after (T1), and one day after the intervention (T2) using a “b”/“d” Recognition Test. Based on a generalized linear mixed model a significant group-time interaction was found for accuracy in the “b”/“d” Recognition Test. Specifically, FME improved their ability to recognize “b”/“d” at post intervention (T0→T1, p = 0.008) and one-day retention test (T0→T2, p < 0.001) more than CON. There was no significant difference in change between GME and CON. For reaction time there were no significant global interaction effects observed. However, planned post hoc comparisons revealed a significant difference between GME and CON immediately after the intervention (T0→T1, p = 0.03). The children’s motivation-score was higher for FME and GME compared to CON (FME-CON: p = 0.01; GME-CON: p = 0.01). The study demonstrated that fine motor-enriched training improved children’s letter recognition more than non motor activities. Both types of motor training were accompanied by higher intrinsic motivation for the children compared to the non motor training group. The study suggests a new method for motor-enriched letter learning and future research should investigate the underlying mechanisms.
Highlights
The acquisition and development of reading skills is a central cognitive attribute to society
CON, control group; FME, fine motor-enriched group; GME, gross motor-enriched group. *Indicates a significant difference within group from T0 to T1. **Indicates a significant difference within group from T0 to T2. ***Indicates a significant difference within group from T1 to T2. #Indicates a significant difference in change from T0 to T1 between CON and GME/FME. ##Indicates a significant difference in change from T0 to T2 between CON and FME. ###Indicates a significant difference between CON and GME in Letter Fluency. § Indicates a significant difference between CON and GME and between FME and GME in amount of trials. §§ Indicates a significant difference between FME and GME compared to CON in IMQ-Score
CON performed significantly better compared to GME in Letter Fluency (p = 0.01) at baseline
Summary
The acquisition and development of reading skills is a central cognitive attribute to society. It is important to identify strategies for improving early reading skills in children. In the pre-alphabetic phase, children recognize words by their general shape and contextual cues. This strategy has the important limitation that it does not allow the child to read unknown words. In the full alphabetic phase, the child knows all the letters and their sounds and how to blend the sounds into full word pronunciations. This allows them to read unfamiliar words. In all phases past the prealphabetic phase, recognition and differentiation of individual letters plays an important role in recognizing whole words (Ehri, 2008)
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