Reading Basics (W4) Flashcards

1
Q

What are the main components of reading? (4)

A
  • Decoding
  • Word Recognition (of isolated words, and text)
  • Fluency (speed & intonation)
  • Comprehension at word, phrase, sentence, and text levels
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2
Q

What are the two parts of fluency?

A

Speed & intonation

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3
Q

What does it mean to read? (2 parts)

A
  • Word recognition

- Linguistic comprehension

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4
Q

Three-stage model: spoken & written language comprehension

A
  • Perceptual analysis (auditory or visual)
  • Word recognition (phono rep & visual rep –> word meaning) - same path for both
  • Discourse-level processing
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5
Q

Stage 1 of written language comprehension - visual analysis (2 parts)

A
  • Discriminate symbols

- Identify symbols

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6
Q

Stage 2 of written language comprehension - Word recognition (3 parts)

A
  • Going from “seen word” to “stored word”
  • Accessing your stored knowledge about the word
  • Two routes to word recognition (direct & indirect)
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7
Q

Direct route to word recognition

A
  • Sight words: visual representation goes straight to the meaning of the word
  • visual pattern(s) formed by letter sequences automatically trigger a visual match in the mental lexicon
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8
Q

Indirect route to word recognition

A
  • Need to go through phonology first (sound it out) then go to the word meaning
  • Visual info (letters & letter sequences) are transformed into their phonological equivalents, which then trigger a phonological match in the mental lexical
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9
Q

Entry to lexicon for the direct route of word recognition is…

A

Orthography

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10
Q

Entry to lexicon for the indirect route of word recognition is…

A

Phonology

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11
Q

What skills do you need to accomplish word recognition through the indirect route?

A

Phonological awareness, phonological recognition, sound awareness, blending, etc.

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12
Q

For each word, the mental lexicon contains… (3)

A
  • A visual representation (orthographic spelling)
  • Phonological representation (pronunciation)
  • Definition
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13
Q

Stage 3 of the 3 stage model of reading: sentence & text processing (3 parts)

A
  • Syntactic analysis
  • Propositional analysis
  • Situational analysis (world knowledge)
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14
Q

Sentence & text processing: syntactic analysis

A

Finding the grammatical constituents (parsing)

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15
Q

Sentence & text processing: propositional analysis

A

Knowing who did what to whom

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16
Q

Sentence & text processing: situational analysis (world knowledge)

A

Knowing who can do what to whom based on content and interpersonal knowledge

17
Q

What cognitive abilities underly both listening and reading comprehension? (3)

A
  • Language abilities (syntactic, semantic, & pragmatic)
  • World knowledge (situational analysis)
  • Problem-solving skills (figuring out how to build a mental scheme of what you are listening to / reading)
18
Q

Reading fluency has three key elements…

A
  • Accuracy
  • Rate
  • Prosody
19
Q

Higher order reading processes (5) are resource-intensive

A
  • Sentence parsing
  • Proposition encoding
  • Inferring
  • Interpreting
  • Integrating
20
Q

Lower order reading processes (3) need to be efficient and automatic.

A
  • letter recognition
  • word recognition
  • semantic encoding (accessing word’s contextual meaning)