Bradley & Bryant Flashcards
What impact does learning the alphabet have on brain development?
- causes fundamental changes to the way the brain represents whole word sounds
- whole word sounds are automatically broken up into sound constituents
- even though the alphabet is a visual code it changes the way we hear and memories words
What did the earlier experiments in 1978 find?
- 60 backward readers (mean age 10), 30 normal readers (mean age 7) (all equal in reading, spelling and IQ)
- had to identify the odd word out: last phoneme-rhyme, middle phoneme-rhyme, first phoneme-alliteration
- backwards readers made more errors on all 3 tests
- experiment 2: children were asked to rhyme 10 words and found that the backward readers made more errors
- suggests backward readers have difficulty categorising sounds
What were the 2 methods used in this classic study?
- longitudinal approach following a group of children as they learn to read (investigating whether early rhyming/alliteration can predict later reading ability)
- training study (investigating whether training in sound categorisation improves reading ability)
Who were the participants of the longitudinal study?
- 403 children (118 were four, 285 were five-year-olds)
- none could read
What was the method of the longitudinal study?
- tested on rhyming and alliteration
- reading, spelling and IQ was assessed over 4 years
What were the results of the longitudinal study?
-significant relationship between initial sound categorisation (alliteration, rhyme) and subsequent reading (2 tests) and spelling attainment (even when differences in IQ and memory are controlled for)
Who were the participants of the training study?
-65 children at least 2 SD below mean in initial categorisation score (bottom 3%)
What was the method of the training study?
- 4 groups matched on age, verbal intelligence, and initial categorisation score
- 4 training regimes, tested progress after intensive training (2 years)
- group 1: sound categorisation training (picture cards only)
- group 2: sound categorisation training (picture cards and plastic letters)
- group 3: semantic categorisation training (same picture cards)
- group 4: unseen control (no training- normal development and maturation)
What were the results of the training study?
- main effect of training was reliable for reading and spelling
- training didn’t affect maths performance (effect is specific to literacy)
What conclusions were drawn?
-sound categorisation training improves reading ability (phonological awareness: the ability to detect and manipulate the component sounds in words)
What are the issues with missing control?
- training on letter-sound correspondences without oral training in sound categorisation
- it’s now routinely included and typically display weaker benefits than with oral sound categorisation
- even in languages where letter-sounded relations are highly consistent, training on letter-sound relations alone doesn’t give the same level of benefit as combined training on sound categorisation and letters
What is the issue with the causal connection?
- used pre-reading children but most children in literate western cultures have some experience of letters
- difficult to disentangle letter awareness from sound categorisation
- Blomert (2011): acquisition of letter knowledge takes time (2-3 years)
- most researchers accept the connection is real
What did Bus et al (1999) find on the size of effect?
- meta analysis on effect of phonological awareness
- D=.70, r=.33 (about 10-12%)
- effect was weaker for longer-term outcomes
What are the ethics of the studies?
- group 3 received training but weren’t expected to benefit from it (concern over whether it’s right to subject children to training that won’t help them)
- group 4 parents gave informed consent and there were some non-significant benefits in this group
What is the scope of the impact it had?
- developmental psychology: phonological awareness (different ages and causal link in other languages), phonological deficit theory of developmental dyslexia, use of longitudinal and training studies to understand causality
- education: early reading curriculum, linking oral skills to reading and spelling, social class differences, pre-school environment