Content area

Abstract

This study examined the nature of the relationship between phonemic awareness and reading and spelling development and focused particularlyon the development of early self-directed writing. The spontaneous writing attempts of 44 first-graders were followed on 6 test occasions from the start of grade 1 (7 years) until the middle of grade 2. The children were divided into 2 groups, one group (N = 21) with a high level of phonemic awareness on entry into grade 1 (HPA) and one group (N = 23) with a low level on entry (LPA). The connection between level of inventedspelling used in the self-directed writing and later reading andspelling achievement in grades 1 and 2 was investigated. The results showed remarkable differences between the two groups. Level of invented spelling at Time 1 was highly predictive of both reading and spelling achievement at the end of grades 1 and 2, but only for the HPA group. With Time of Mastery regarding phonemic spelling as the independent variable and reading and spelling at the end of grade 2 as the dependent variable, regressions analysis indicated strong direct effects of early phonemic spelling upon later reading and spelling development, but only for the LPA children. The two groups showed different patterns of development in learning to read and spell during grades 1 and 2.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Phonemic awareness, spontaneous writing, and reading and spelling development from a preventive perspective
Author
Frost, Jørgen
Pages
487-513
Publication year
2001
Publication date
Sep 2001
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
09224777
e-ISSN
15730905
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
883889408
Copyright
Kluwer Academic Publishers 2001