Abstract

Despite considerable evidence regarding the influence of orthography on reading processing, the impact of orthographic depth on reading predictors remains unclear. In addition, it also remains unknown the role of the orthography in the influence of auditory temporal processing and attention skills on word reading skills. The current study investigates the word reading predictors in a group of British and Brazilian children with typical development considering phonological, auditory sensory, short-term memory, and sustained attention skills. Rhyme and Alliteration skills predicted word reading in both groups; however, the correlation in the British group was more robust. Short-term memory was also correlated with reading in both groups; however, it was a significant word reading predictor only in the British group. The auditory sensory was not directly correlated with word reading in either group; however, it was involved with Rhyme and Alliteration performance only in the British group. Those results were discussed considering the complexity of the phonological structure and opaque orthography in English when compared to Portuguese, which indicates that the less transparent the orthography, the higher the importance of factors such as phonological awareness, short-term memory, and to some extent, auditory sensory processing skills on word reading acquisition. Those results emphasize the need to consider orthography and phonological features of a particular language when developing a reading assessment and treatments.

Highlights

  • Research has shown that word reading is an important predictor for reading fluency in the first years of formal education (Clemens et al, 2011; Morris and Perney, 2018)

  • The results showed that phonological awareness was the main predictor of reading accuracy in all languages, except in Finish, the most transparent orthography studied

  • The overall results demonstrated that Rhyme and Alliteration predicted reading in both groups, with a stronger correlation in the British group

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Research has shown that word reading is an important predictor for reading fluency in the first years of formal education (Clemens et al, 2011; Morris and Perney, 2018). In languages such as Italian and Spanish, the spelling-sound correspondence is highly consistent (transparent orthography), and the predominant phonological structure of syllables is simple (consonant-vowel), enabling the successful use of graphemephoneme correspondence as the main strategy when learning to read (Goswami, 2008). The use of this strategy decreases as reading is established, and words can progressively be read from memory by sight (Share, 2008). The use of those strategies seems to persist for longer than in transparent orthographies (Deacon and Kirby, 2004)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
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