L8 - Reading development Flashcards
Describe qualities of the average skilled reader
- Reads at least 300 words/minute
- Can identify 50, 000+ words
- Can simultaneously:
- > retrieve word meanings
- > syntactically parse the text
- > integrate text with previous context and LTM to create meaning
What is reading and what does it require?
Acquired, “culturally engineered” skill
Requires:
- highly sophisticated pattern recognition skills
- efficient memory encoding and retrieval processes
- symbolic processing
What is Specific Reading Disability (SRD)?
Reading difficulty despite at least average cognitive ability and educational opportunity.
What did Rutter and Yule’s (1977) epidemiological study of SRD find?
- SRD is a reading level 2 years lower than expected for age and IQ (even for age 10 with IQ age 12, but reading age 10)
- 77% referrals male, only 54% general reading problem.
- biological and environmental contributions (larger families and late birth order, family history).
Why is it hard to determine the causes of Specific Reading Disorder ?
- Many factors required in reading; non-cognitive (motivation, practice), general cognitive (attention, listening comprehension), and specific cognitive factors (visual discrimination, phonemic awareness).
- Difficult to determine causal factors because poor readers are worse than good readers at many tasks.
What are the theories of reading?
Top-down theories
- Reading is a psycholinguistic guessing game, where knowledge and context predicts next word. Readers should attend to meaning.
- > efficient reading is purely visual, highly selective and inferential and natural.
- > whole language approach to instruction
Bottom-up theories
- Reading = decoding x comprehension.
- Children learn to decode words by mapping written words to phonological lexicon. They use comprehensive processes that they already use for processing written and spoken language.
Why is phonological information important for reading?
Two possibilities:
- Direct access: map printed words straight onto meanings. Learn association between patterns of words and meanings in spoken language.
- Indirect access: learn to translate from orthography of language into phonology. Then use spoken word semantic links.
What is phonemic awareness?
- Ability to attend to and manipulate the separate sounds in words (e.g. know beginning of pat is “p” and if you took it away it would be “at”)
- Best predictor of success at learning to read up until grade 2.
- > trained phonemic awareness and increased performance of reading and spelling especially when it connected phonological segments to letters, lasts for up to 6 years.
- Influenced by reading instruction
- Facilitated by exposure to alphabetic orthography
Why is it hard to acquire phonemic awareness?
Spoken language is learned holistically, and children attend to meaning rather than form.
To acquire children need:
- become aware symbolic status of words
- develop sensitivity to the form of words
What is phonemic awareness a good predictor of and why?
Reading: PA at school entry level predicts future reading skill.
Deficits in phonemic awareness specifically impede reading (2012 meta-analysis).
Is there a cause of Specific Reading Disorder?
- Many factors influence successful reading, but doesn’t mean there are different causes.
- Lies in “phonological core” which is essential to link orthography with phonology and meaning.
- Failing to acquire these processes has reverberating consequences (get worse and worse); academic achievement, vocabulary growth, self-esteem.