Longitudinal Contributions of Phonemic Awareness to Reading Greek Beyond Estimation of Verbal Ability and Morphological Awareness

2017 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 218-232 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evdokia Pittas
Psico-USF ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 471-480 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pedro Viana de Freitas Junior ◽  
Márcia Maria Peruzzi Elia da Mota

Abstract The present study aims to answer a recently raised controversy regarding the role that morphological awareness has to reading skills acquisition in Brazilian Portuguese. The aim was to investigate whether morphological awareness contributes to reading after controlling for non-verbal intelligence and phonological awareness in Brazilian Portuguese variables. The study included 52 elementary school students enrolled in a public school in the municipality of São Gonçalo, state of Rio de Janeiro. The hierarchical regression analyses showed that derivational morphological awareness contributes to reading independently of phonological processing and non-verbal ability. The results of this study indicate that morphological awareness contributes to reading words but not to reading comprehension. The results of this study corroborate with the hypothesis that even in an alphabetic language, such as Portuguese, morphological awareness is important to reading acquisition.


2013 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 129-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Danielle Brimo

A spelling assessment is used to determine a student’s baseline spelling percentage,potential intervention goals, and, ultimately, the student’s spelling progress. Additionally,a spelling assessment can provide information about a student’s linguistic awarenessabilities such as phonemic awareness, orthographic pattern awareness, mentalgraphemic representations, and morphological awareness. In this paper, a case exampleis presented to describe the spelling assessment and analysis of spelling errors toultimately determine baseline spelling percentage and spelling intervention goals, basedon a multilinguistic approach.


Author(s):  
Andréia Alves Correa ◽  
Viviane Do Rocio Barbosa ◽  
Sandra Regina Kirchner Guimarães

O presente artigo visa apresentar o impacto de um programa de ensino voltado para o desenvolvimento de habilidades metafonológicas e metamorfológicas sobre a aprendizagem da leitura e da escrita. Participaram 94 alunos do 1° ano do Ensino Fundamental, distribuídos em três Grupos experimentais - Turma E (programa de ensino para o desenvolvimento da consciência fonológica), Turma D (programa de ensino para o desenvolvimento da consciência morfológica), Turma C (programa de ensino para o desenvolvimento de habilidades metafonológicas e metamorfológicas) - e um grupo de Controle (Turma A). Os estudantes foram submetidos a pré-teste, intervenção e pós-teste. Os resultados obtidos sugerem que a prática pedagógica desenvolvida no primeiro ano do Ensino Fundamental deve ocupar-se do desenvolvimento da consciência fonológica, principalmente, da consciência fonêmica, dada sua importância na aprendizagem do princípio alfabético e, acrescentar a esta prática o ensino explícito de habilidades morfológicas, tendo em vista que os resultados obtidos, neste estudo, sustentam que o ensino explícito de elementos sonoros e elementos mórficos, de forma conjugada, gera efeitos positivos em termos de aprendizagem da leitura e da escrita.Palavras-chave: Consciência Fonológica. Consciência Morfológica. Ensino.AbstractThe present article aims to present the impacts of a teaching program aimed at the development of metaphonological and metamorphological abilities on reading and writing learning. A total of 94 students from the 1th grade of Elementary School, distributed in three experimental Groups - Class E Teaching for the development of phonological awareness), Class D (teaching program for the development of morphological awareness), Class C (teaching program for the development of metaphonological and metamorphological skills) - and a Control Group (Class A). The students were subjected to pre-test, intervention and post-test. The results suggest that the pedagogical practice developed in the first year of elementary school should focus on the development of phonological awareness, mainly phonemic awareness, given its importance in learning the alphabetical principle and add to this practice the explicit teaching of morphological skills , Considering that the results obtained in this study bear that the explicit teaching of sound elements and morphic elements, in combination, generates positive effects in terms of reading and writing skills’ learning.Keywords: Phonological Awareness. Morphological Awareness. Teaching.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lesly Wade-Woolley ◽  
Laura M. Steacy

In spelling English words, vowels pose perhaps the greatest difficulty, especially thereduced vowels typically found in unstressed syllables. In morphologically complex words, however, the identity of reduced vowels can often be recovered by considering morphologically-related words. In this brief report, we used item-level analyses to explore predictors of 110 4th and 5th graders’ vowel spelling in derived words (the a and o in majority) as a function of spelling performance on those same vowels in morphologically-related base words (the a and o in major). Variance was partitioned between child and vowel predictors. Significant child predictors were phonemic awareness, prosodic awareness, morphological awareness, and priming by the base word. The significant vowel predictor was syllable stress. Significant interactions were observed between syllable stress and prosodic awareness, and between syllable stress and phonemic awareness. We discuss insights for spelling and reading to be gleaned from linking morphology and prosodic phonology.


2020 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 603-616
Author(s):  
Kenn Apel ◽  
Victoria S. Henbest

Purpose Morphological awareness is the ability to consciously manipulate the smallest units of meaning in language. Morphological awareness contributes to success with literacy skills for children with typical language and those with language impairment. However, little research has focused on the morphological awareness skills of children with speech sound disorders (SSD), who may be at risk for literacy impairments. No researcher has examined the morphological awareness skills of children with SSD and compared their skills to children with typical speech using tasks representing a comprehensive definition of morphological awareness, which was the main purpose of this study. Method Thirty second- and third-grade students with SSD and 30 with typical speech skills, matched on age and receptive vocabulary, completed four morphological awareness tasks and measures of receptive vocabulary, real-word reading, pseudoword reading, and word-level spelling. Results Results indicated there was no difference between the morphological awareness skills of students with and without SSD. Although morphological awareness was moderately to strongly related to the students' literacy skills, performance on the morphological awareness tasks contributed little to no additional variance to the children's real-word reading and spelling skills beyond what was accounted for by pseudoword reading. Conclusions Findings suggest that early elementary-age students with SSD may not present with concomitant morphological awareness difficulties and that the morphological awareness skills of these students may not play a unique role in their word-level literacy skills. Limitations and suggestions for future research on the morphological awareness skills of children with SSD are discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 63 (4) ◽  
pp. 1240-1253
Author(s):  
Victoria S. Henbest ◽  
Lisa Fitton ◽  
Krystal L. Werfel ◽  
Kenn Apel

Purpose Spelling is a skill that relies on an individual's linguistic awareness, the ability to overtly manipulate language. The ability to accurately spell is important for academic and career success into adulthood. The spelling skills of adults have received some attention in the literature, but there is limited information regarding which approach for analyzing adults' spelling is optimal for guiding instruction or intervention for those who struggle. Thus, we aimed to examine the concurrent validity of four different scoring methods for measuring adults' spellings (a dichotomous scoring method and three continuous methods) and to determine whether adults' linguistic awareness skills differentially predict spelling outcomes based on the scoring method employed. Method Sixty undergraduate college students who were determined to be average readers as measured by a word reading and contextual word reading task were administered a spelling task as well as morphological, orthographic, phonemic, and syntactic awareness tasks. Results All four scoring methods were highly correlated suggesting high concurrent validity among the measures. Two linguistic awareness skills, morphological awareness and syntactic awareness, predicted spelling performance on both the dichotomous and continuous scoring methods. Contrastively, phonemic awareness and orthographic awareness predicted spelling performance only when spelling was scored using a continuous measure error analysis. Conclusions The results of this study confirm that multiple linguistic awareness skills are important for spelling in adults who are average readers. The results also highlight the need for using continuous measures of spelling when planning intervention or instruction, particularly in the areas of orthographic and phonemic awareness.


2020 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 509-513
Author(s):  
Ashley Bourque Meaux ◽  
Julie A. Wolter ◽  
Ginger G. Collins

Purpose This article introduces the Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools Forum: Morphological Awareness as a Key Factor in Language-Literacy Success for Academic Achievement. The goal of this forum is to relate the influence morphological awareness (MA) has on overall language and literacy development with morphology acting as the “binding agent” between orthography, phonology, and semantics ( Perfetti, 2007 ) in assessment and intervention for school-aged children. Method This introduction provides a foundation for MA development and explores the influence MA has over the course of school-aged language and literacy development. Through summaries of the 11 articles in this forum, school-based speech-language pathologists will be able to convey the importance of MA to promote successful educational outcomes for kindergarten to adolescent students. The forum explores researcher-developed assessments used to help identify MA skill level in first- through eighth-grade students at risk for literacy failure to support instructional needs. The forum also provides school-based speech-language pathologists with details to design and implement MA interventions to support academic success for school-aged students with varying speech-language needs (e.g., dual language emersion, vocabulary development, reading comprehension) using various service delivery models (e.g., small group, classroom-based, intensive summer camps). Conclusion MA is effective in facilitating language and literacy development and as such can be an ideally focused on using multilinguistic approaches for assessment and intervention. The articles in this issue highlight the importance in assessment measures and intervention approaches that focus on students' MA to improve overall academic success in children of all ages and abilities.


ASHA Leader ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 18 (7) ◽  
pp. 16-17
Author(s):  
Julie Wolter

Julie Wolter, an expert in early language development, recently led an online chat about the contribution of morphological awareness to semantic understanding and literacy development. Here's what the Leader overheard ...


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