Abstract

Learning to read in most alphabetic orthographies requires not only the acquisition of simple grapheme-phoneme correspondences (GPCs) but also the acquisition of context-sensitive GPCs, where surrounding letters change a grapheme’s pronunciation. We aimed to explore the use and development of simple GPCs (e.g. a ➔ /æ/) and context-sensitive GPCs (e.g. [w]a ➔ /ɔ/, as in “swan” or a[l][d] ➔ /o:/, as in “bald”) in pseudoword reading. Across three experiments, English- and German-speaking children in grades 2–4 read aloud pseudowords, where vowel graphemes had different pronunciations according to different contexts (e.g. “hact”, “wact”, “hald”). First, we found that children use context-sensitive GPCs from grade 2 onwards, even when they are not explicitly taught. Second, we used a mathematical optimisation procedure to assess whether children’s vowel responses can be described by assuming that they rely on a mix of simple and context-sensitive GPCs. While the approach works well for German adults (Schmalz et al. in Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 26, 831–852, 2014), we found poor model fits for both German- and English-speaking children. Additional analyses using an entropy measure and data from a third experiment showed that children’s pseudoword reading responses are variable and likely affected by random noise. We found a decrease in entropy across grade and reading ability across all conditions in both languages. This suggests that GPC knowledge becomes increasingly refined across grades 2–4.

Highlights

  • Learning to read in most alphabetic orthographies requires the acquisition of simple grapheme-phoneme correspondences (GPCs) and the acquisition of contextsensitive GPCs, where surrounding letters change a grapheme’s pronunciation

  • By the end of grade 2, children learning to read in English already give some contextappropriate vowel responses when context-sensitive GPCs signal a change compared to the simple pronunciation

  • This suggests that children sometimes apply context-sensitive GPCs by the end of grade 2, even in the absence of their explicit instruction

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Summary

Introduction

Learning to read in most alphabetic orthographies requires the acquisition of simple grapheme-phoneme correspondences (GPCs) and the acquisition of contextsensitive GPCs, where surrounding letters change a grapheme’s pronunciation. English- and German-speaking children in grades 2–4 read aloud pseudowords, where vowel graphemes had different pronunciations according to different contexts In the English orthography, some graphemes are pronounced in the same way in most contexts (e.g. k ➔ /k/) We refer to such context-insensitive grapheme-phoneme correspondences as simple GPCs. Often, the pronunciation of a grapheme is influenced by the context in which it occurs (context-sensitive GPC; hereafter: CS_GPC; Treiman, Kessler, & Bick, 2003; Treiman, Mullennix, Bijeljac-Babic, & Richmond-Welty, 1995; Venezky, 1970): For example, in Australian English (the dialect of the participants in experiments 1 and 3), the a in watt is pronounced /ɔ/ rather than /æ/, because an a preceded by a w is often pronounced as in “swan”. This leads to a conflict between the two possible pronunciations, /æ/ and /ɔ/—provided that the reader has picked up on the linguistic regularity that a w changes the pronunciation of a subsequent a (Treiman et al, 2006)

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