Content area

Abstract

A study examined the importance of two phonological encoding procedures (addressed phonology and assembled phonology) in children who are learning to read and how the relative importance of these two procedures might change over the age range from six to eight. Subjects, 72 fifth, fourth, and third grade students from two inner London (England) primary schools, were asked to pretend to be teachers marking a text for inaccuracies. A later experiment investigated another grade 3 sample of 17 children in another school. Still another experiment retested some of the original subjects, and a fourth experiment used 17 second graders aged six. The sentences were constructed with either exception words (whose correct phonological forms can only be obtained using addressed phonology) or nonwords (whose phonological form must be assembled). Results indicated that both forms of phonological recoding occurred with the older children, but that phonological encoding due to addressed phonology was observed in the younger children. (Three tables of data are included, and 26 references are attached.) (RS)

Details

1007399
Title
The Development of Phonological Processes in Reading for Meaning
Pages
34
Number of pages
34
Publication date
August 1988
Source type
Report
Summary language
English
Language of publication
English
Document type
Report, Speech/Lecture
Subfile
ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
Accession number
ED307580
ProQuest document ID
63135822
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/reports/development-phonological-processes-reading/docview/63135822/se-2?accountid=208611
Last updated
2024-04-21
Database
Education Research Index