scholarly journals Relationship Between Rapid Naming Speed and Reading Speed as a Marker of Reading Difficulties of Estonian Children from 6 to 8 Years

2011 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 113-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kadi Lukanenok

Relationship Between Rapid Naming Speed and Reading Speed as a Marker of Reading Difficulties of Estonian Children from 6 to 8 YearsReading is one of the fundamental skills for successful performance in modern society. Reading acquisition is one of the most important tasks in primary level of education. The early identification of reading difficulties (RD) enables educators to apply the treatment as early as possible. Rapid naming (RN) is one of the reliable methods used to identify RD and risk for RD. The relationship between RN skills, especially RN speed and reading decoding speed, is investigated as a good tool for predicting reading at decoding level and welldocumented in languages using non-transparent orthography. Few researches are carried out on RN skills in transparent orthographies. The current research is the first attempt to investigate RN skills of children speaking Estonian, highly transparent Finno-Ugric language. The aim of this study is to examine longitudinally RN speed and decoding skills of children at the age 6, 7 and 8 years to detect the relationship between RN speed in prereading age and reading age after starting formal reading instruction.

2012 ◽  
Vol 112 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
George K. Georgiou ◽  
Timothy C. Papadopoulos ◽  
Argyro Fella ◽  
Rauno Parrila

Author(s):  
Mª Isabel Marí Sanmillán ◽  
Mª Dolores Gil Llario ◽  
Roberta Ceccato ◽  
Yazna Cisternas Rojas

Abstract:The analysis of the cognitive processes that are the basis of reading skill has detected some predictors of the development of phonological-orthographic skills necessary in learning it and has identified the naming speed as a good predictor of deficit related to reading difficulties. The objective of this study is to analyze the relationship between naming speed and initial learning of literacy through the analysis of aspects such as the influence of the reading habits, age of onset of literacy or participation in specific learning methods as Kumon. The study involved 289 children aged 4 to 6 years. Results showed naming speed correlates with phonological awareness, predicts reading comprehension, enhanced by good family reading habits and the Kumon method which shows itself specially relevant when beginning the reading and writing process. These results allow us to conclude the relevance of this function in predicting success at the start of reading and writing learning processes.Resumen:El análisis de los procesos cognitivos que están a la base de la habilidad lectora ha permitido detectar algunos predictores del desarrollo de las habilidades fonológico-ortográficas e identificar la velocidad de nombramiento como un buen predictor del éxito de la adquisición de la lectura, o en su defecto, de las dificultades lectoras en edad escolar. El objetivo de este estudio es analizar la relación que existe entre velocidad de nombramiento y el aprendizaje inicial de la lectoescritura a través del análisis de aspectos como la influencia de los hábitos lectores, la edad de inicio de la lecto-escritura o la participación en métodos de aprendizaje específicos como el Kumon. En el estudio participaron 289 niños de 4 a 6 años. Los resultados indican que la velocidad de nombramiento correlaciona con la conciencia fonológica, predice la comprensión lectora, se ve favorecida por unos buenos hábitos lectores familiares así como por como el método Kumon mostrándose especialmente relevante cuando se está iniciando la lectoescritura. Estos resultados permiten concluir la relevancia de esta función en la predicción del éxito en el inicio de la lecto-escritura.Palabras clave: Velocidad de nombramiento, inicio lecto-escritura, comprensión lectora.


1993 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-33 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heinz Wimmer

AbstractThe present study assessed reading difficulties and cognitive impairments of German-speaking dyslexic children at grade levels 2, 3, and 4. It was found that German dyslexic children suffered from a pervasive speed deficit for all types of reading tasks, including text, high frequency words, and pseudowords, but at the same time showed generally rather high reading accuracy. For pseudowords, reading refusals or word responses were absent, and the majority of errors was close to the target pronunciation. Reading speed seemed to be most impaired for pseudowords and function words that did not allow the children to take a short-cut from phonemically mediated word processing. The discussion offers a developmental framework for the interpretation of these reading difficulties. For the cognitive tasks, dyslexic children did not differ from age-matched control children on the pseudoword repetition task or the digit span task, indicating that auditory perception and memory were not impaired. On phonological awareness tasks (rhyme oddity detection, vowel substitution, and pseudoword spelling), dyslexic children scored lower than age-matched control children, but not lower than younger reading-level control children. The performance of the dyslexic children on the phonemic segmentation tasks (pseudoword spelling and vowel substitution) was high in absolute terms. In contrast, marked differences between dyslexic and age-matched controls were found on rapid naming tasks: dyslexic grade 4 children showed lower numeral-naming speed than reading-level grade 2 children. Numeral-naming speed turned out to be the most important predictor of reading speed differences. These findings are discussed in relation to the phonological impairment explanation of dyslexia and to recent alternative explanations that posit an underlying impairment in automatizing skills which demand the fast execution of low-level cognitive processes.


2007 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 231-253 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chen-Huei Liao ◽  
George K. Georgiou ◽  
Rauno Parrila

2006 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 199-220 ◽  
Author(s):  
George K. Georgiou ◽  
Rauno Parrila ◽  
John Kirby

2007 ◽  
Vol 21 (9) ◽  
pp. 885-903 ◽  
Author(s):  
George K. Georgiou ◽  
Rauno Parrila ◽  
Chen-Huei Liao

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jelena Zaric

Reading is crucial for successful participation in the modern world. However, 3-8% (e.g., Moll et al., 2014) of children in elementary school age show reading difficulties, which can lead to limited education and enhance risks of social and financial disadvantages (Valtin, 2017). Therefore, it is important to identify reading relevant components (Tippelt & Schmidt-Hertha, 2018). In this context, especially phonological awareness (i.e., awareness of the sound structure of the language) and naming speed (i.e., fast and automatized retrieval of information) were identified as significant components for reading skills (e.g., Georgiou et al., 2012; Landerl & Thaler, 2006; Vellutino, Fletcher, Snowling, & Scanlon, 2004). One further component, which is of growing interest to the recent research, is orthographic knowledge. It comprises the knowledge about the spelling of specific words (word-specific orthographic knowledge) and about legal letter patterns (general orthographic knowledge; Apel, 2011). Previous research focused predominantly on examining the role of orthographic knowledge on basic reading level, including word identification and word meaning (Conrad et al., 2013; Rothe et al., 2015). The relationship between orthographic knowledge and reading comprehension as the core objective of reading, including understanding of the relationship between words within a sentence as well as building a coherence between sentences (Perfetti et al., 2005), was on the contrary scarcely the object of research. The first goal of this dissertation is, therefore, to provide a remedy by investigating the role of orthographic knowledge on higher reading processes (sentence- and text-level). The scarce body of research investigating children with reading difficulties provide a mixed result pattern (e.g., Ise et al., 2014). Therefore, this dissertation aims at clarifying the influence of orthographic knowledge on word-, sentence-, and text-level in children without and with reading difficulties. A thorough understanding of reading relevant components is also important for conception of interventions aiming at individual reading performance improvements in order to prevent school failure. One promising approach to help children to overcome their reading difficulties is a text-fading based reading training. During this procedure, reading material is faded out letter by letter in reading direction (i.e., in German from left to right; Breznitz & Nevat, 2006). The aim of this manipulation is to prompt the individual to read faster than usual, resulting in reading rate and comprehension improvements (e.g., Nagler et al., 2015). However, the underlying mechanisms leading to improvements of reading performance are still unclear. Considering previous findings showing orthographic skills to influence training outcomes (Berninger et al., 1999), and also word reading performance after a reading intervention (Stage et al., 2003), it seems plausible to include orthographic knowledge when investigating potential training effects. Therefore, this dissertation aims at investigating the predictive value of orthographic knowledge for comprehension performance during the text-fading based reading training. In order to answer the first research question, two empirical papers are implemented (see Appendix A: Zarić et al., 2020 and Appendix B: Zarić & Nagler, 2021), which investigate the role of orthographic knowledge for reading at word-, sentence-, and text-level in German school children without and with reading difficulties. The study by Zarić et al. (2020) examines the incremental predictive value for explained reading variance of both word-specific and general orthographic knowledge in relation to variance amount explained by general intelligence and phonological awareness. For this purpose, data from 66 German third-graders without reading difficulties were analyzed. Correlation and multiple regression analyses have shown that word-specific and general orthographic knowledge contribute a unique significant amount to the variance of reading comprehension on word-, sentence-, and text-level, over and above the explained variance by general intelligence and phonological awareness. In order to answer the question whether word-specific and general orthographic knowledge also explain variance in children with poor reading proficiency, in addition to established predictors phonological awareness and naming speed, the data from 103 German third-graders with reading difficulties were analyzed in a second study (Zarić & Nagler, 2021). The analyses revealed that word-specific and general orthographic knowledge explain a unique significant amount of the variance of reading on word- and sentence-level. On text-level, these two components did not explain a significant amount of unique variance. Here, only phonological awareness was shown to be a significant predictor. The results indicate that the knowledge about the spelling of specific words (word-specific orthographic knowledge) and the knowledge about legal letter patterns (general orthographic knowledge) contribute to reading comprehension on word-level. Following the assumptions, for instance, of the Lexical Quality Hypothesis (Perfetti & Hart, 2002) high-quality orthographic representations are considered to be important for higher reading processes, such as comprehension. ...


2012 ◽  
Vol 40 (8) ◽  
pp. 1313-1326 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne B. Arnett ◽  
Bruce F. Pennington ◽  
Erik Willcutt ◽  
Julia Dmitrieva ◽  
Brian Byrne ◽  
...  

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