Artigo Revisado por pares

Movement into Reading: Is the First Stage of Printed Word Learning Visual or Phonetic?

1985; Wiley; Volume: 20; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2307/747753

ISSN

1936-2722

Autores

Linnea C. Ehri, Lee S. Wilce,

Tópico(s)

Language Development and Disorders

Resumo

KINDERGARTENERS WERE GROUPED according to their ability to read words: prereaders (no words read), novices (a few words read), and veterans (several words read). They were taught to read two kinds of word spellings: simplified phonetic spellings whose letters corresponded to sounds (e.g., JRF for giraffe), and visual spellings whose letters bore no sound correspondence but were more distinctive visually. Prereaders learned to read the visual spellings more easily than the phonetic spellings, while novices and veterans learned to read the phonetic spellings more easily. These results suggest that when children move into reading, they shift from visual cue processing of words to phonetic cue processing. Phonetic processing entails recognizing and remembering associations between letters in spellings and sounds in pronunciations. This learning mechanism, rather than visually based sight-word learning or sounding out and blending, is claimed to explain how children first become able to read single words reliably.

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