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Castles, Anne; Wilson, Katherine; Coltheart, Max – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2011
Experienced readers show influences of orthographic knowledge on tasks ostensibly tapping phonemic awareness. Here we draw on data from an experimental training study to demonstrate that even preschoolers show influences of their emerging orthographic abilities in such tasks. A total of 40 children were taught some letter-sound correspondences but…
Descriptors: Phonemics, Beginning Reading, Phonemic Awareness, Program Effectiveness
Castles, Anne; Coltheart, Max; Wilson, Katherine; Valpied, Jodie; Wedgwood, Joanne – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009
Knowledge of letter-sound correspondences underpins successful reading acquisition, and yet little is known about how young children acquire this knowledge and what prior information they bring to the learning process. In this study, we used an experimental training design to examine whether either prior letter awareness or prior phonemic…
Descriptors: Phonemics, Beginning Reading, Phonemic Awareness, Reading Ability

Manis, Franklin R.; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1997
Administered phonological awareness and phoneme identification tasks to dyslexic children and chronological age (CA) and reading-level (RL) comparison groups. Found no real differences in categorical perception between dyslexic and RL groups; however, more dyslexics (7 of 25) had abnormal identification functions. Results suggest that some…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Auditory Perception, Dyslexia, Perceptual Impairments

Bowey, Judith A. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2002
Examines two independent data sets to support argument that although onset-rime sensitivity typically predicts school entrants' later word reading skills, phoneme sensitivity predicts more variation. Maintains that multiple regression analyses do not reveal level of phonological sensitivity needed to understand alphabetic reading instruction and…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Children, Emergent Literacy, Phonemic Awareness

McCutchen, Deborah; Crain-Thoreson, Catherine – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1994
Two experiments studied the role of phonemic information in children's comprehension during silent reading. A sentence acceptability task indicated that readers required more time to read and comprehend sentences with word-initial phonemes (the "tongue-twister effect") than control sentences. When the first task was added to a digit…
Descriptors: Phonemic Awareness, Preadolescents, Reading Comprehension, Reading Processes

Treiman, Rebecca; Broderick, Victor; Tincoff, Ruth; Rodriguez, Kira – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1998
Three studies examined linguistic factors influencing preschooler's phonemic awareness task performance. Results indicated no performance differences between fricatives and stops. Subjects were more likely to mistakenly judge that syllables began with a target phoneme when the initial phoneme differed from the target only in voicing than when it…
Descriptors: Consonants, Language Research, Performance Factors, Phonemes

Muter, Valerie; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1997
Followed beginning readers to examine phonological skill influences. Found segmentation strongly correlated with attainment in reading and spelling at end of first year. Also found that letter name knowledge predicted both reading and spelling skill and showed interactive effect with segmentation. Finally, found that by end of second year, rhyming…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Letters (Alphabet), Longitudinal Studies, Phonemic Awareness

Hulme, Charles; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2002
This short-term longitudinal study examined performance of 5- and 6-year-olds in early stages of reading on three phonological awareness tasks. Findings indicated that measures of phoneme awareness were the best concurrent and longitudinal predictors of reading skill, with onset-rime skills making no additional predictive contribution once…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Children, Emergent Literacy, Longitudinal Studies

Hulme, Charles – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2002
Notes that preceding commentaries raise several issues, including which variables need to be controlled to demonstrate a specific relationship between phoneme-level skills and reading ability and whether prereaders can perform phonemic awareness tasks. Maintains that none of the commentaries casts doubt on the basic conclusion that phonemic-level…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Children, Emergent Literacy, Phonemic Awareness

Chiappe, Penny; Chiappe, Dan L.; Siegel, Linda S. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2001
This study examined interaction between speech perception and lexical information among good- and poor-reading 7-year-olds. Findings suggest that lexicon may operate as compensatory mechanism for resolving speech perception ambiguities. Statistical correction for group differences in phoneme identification eliminated differences in phoneme…
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Children, Classification, Lexicology

Bryant, Peter – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2002
Reiterates hypothesis that there are two routes from onset and rime awareness to reading: one indirect and one direct. Asserts that the evidence that Hulme et al. present against the hypothesis is not convincing, partly because the hypothesis predicts most of the Hulme et al. results and partly because of weaknesses in the design of Hulme et al.'s…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Children, Emergent Literacy, Phonemic Awareness

Snowling, Margaret J.; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1994
Examined the phonological analysis and verbal working memory components of the sound categorization task and their relationships to reading skill differences. Children were tested on sound categorization by having them identify odd words in sequences. Sound categorization performance was sensitive to individual differences in speech perception…
Descriptors: Children, Classification, Foreign Countries, Memory

Bowey, Judith A. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1994
Study examined whether phonemic sensitivity is limited to alphabetically literate individuals. Children not exposed to reading instruction were given pairs of phonological sensitivity tasks. Novice readers scored higher in phonological sensitivity than nonreaders of equivalent letter knowledge, when controlled for verbal ability; among nonreaders,…
Descriptors: Early Reading, Foreign Countries, Letters (Alphabet), Phonemic Awareness

Treiman, Rebecca; Zukowski, Andrea – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1996
Noting that in previous research, the linguistic status of the unit has often been confounded by its size, five experiments were conducted to provide a better test of the linguistic status hypothesis. Results supported the linguistic status hypothesis by indicating that effects of linguistic level on phonological sensitivity cannot always be…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Emergent Literacy, Language Acquisition, Linguistic Competence

Hecht, Steven A.; Close, Linda – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2002
Investigated factors that predicted variability in responses to analytic and synthetic phonemic awareness training with kindergartners living in poverty. Found that spelling skills were the most consistent predictor of variability in phonemic awareness in response to instruction. Amount of exposure children had to the intervention contributed to…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged Youth, Early Childhood Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Invented Spelling
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