L8 - Reading development Flashcards

1
Q

Describe qualities of the average skilled reader

A
  • 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
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2
Q

What is reading and what does it require?

A

Acquired, “culturally engineered” skill

Requires:

  • highly sophisticated pattern recognition skills
  • efficient memory encoding and retrieval processes
  • symbolic processing
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3
Q

What is Specific Reading Disability (SRD)?

A

Reading difficulty despite at least average cognitive ability and educational opportunity.

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4
Q

What did Rutter and Yule’s (1977) epidemiological study of SRD find?

A
  • 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).
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5
Q

Why is it hard to determine the causes of Specific Reading Disorder ?

A
  • 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.
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6
Q

What are the theories of reading?

A

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.
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7
Q

Why is phonological information important for reading?

A

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.
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8
Q

What is phonemic awareness?

A
  • 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
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9
Q

Why is it hard to acquire phonemic awareness?

A

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
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10
Q

What is phonemic awareness a good predictor of and why?

A

Reading: PA at school entry level predicts future reading skill.
Deficits in phonemic awareness specifically impede reading (2012 meta-analysis).

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11
Q

Is there a cause of Specific Reading Disorder?

A
  • 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.
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