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Understanding prosody and morphology in school-age children’s reading [<Journal>]
Chan, Jessica S. [Verfasser]; Wade-Woolley, Lesly [Verfasser]; Heggie, Lindsay [Verfasser].
DNB Subject Category Language
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2
An examination of prosodic awareness and reading achievement across Grades 3 to 6: A focus on English Monolinguals and Chinese-English Bilingual Children
Chan, Jessica. - 2019
BASE
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3
Multisyllabic Word Reading in Grades 4 and 5: Accuracy, Errors, and Associated Child-Level Skills
Heggie, Lindsay. - 2017
Abstract: The vast majority of English words are multisyllabic (Balota et al., 2007; Baayen, Piepenbrock, & Gulikers, 1995), constituting an increasingly large proportion of the words students encounter in print beginning as early as Grade 3 (Archer, Gleason, & Vachon, 2003; Nagy & Anderson, 1984; Zeno, Ivens, Millard, & Duvvuri, 1995). Students who continue to struggle with word reading through elementary and into secondary school often have a particular difficulty with longer words (Archer, Gleason, & Vachon, 2003; Moats, 1998). This multi-manuscript dissertation reports on two studies of multisyllabic word reading in typically achieving, English-speaking students in grades 4 and 5. The first study examined children’s multisyllabic word reading ability and the relative contributions of five variables of interest: phonological awareness, suprasegmental phonological awareness, morphological awareness, vocabulary, and naming speed. Regression analyses showed that the contribution of phonological awareness (at both the segmental and suprasegmental levels) was fully mediated by that of morphological awareness and that naming speed and morphological awareness predicted children’s multisyllabic word reading accuracy at this stage of reading development. The second study used error analysis to describe the types of errors students made when reading multisyllabic words. Error productions were examined according to reading ability, based on a six-point coding scheme developed to assess decoding and lexical stress errors; good readers made proportionally fewer errors, but were more likely to make errors involving shifts in lexical stress. Error productions were also described in terms of lexicalization (reading the item as a real but erroneous word) and stress regularization (stress shift to the first syllable, in accordance with the majority of English trisyllabic words). Both morphological awareness and vocabulary were positively related to the incidence of lexicalized errors, while both reading ability and suprasegmental phonological awareness were positively related to participants’ tendency to regularize the primary stress of multisyllabic words. Results of both studies are discussed in terms of contributions to theory, instruction, and future research in multisyllabic word reading. ; PhD
Keyword: Morphological Awareness; Multisyllabic Words; Prosodic Awareness; Reading; Reading Development; Word Reading
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1974/15684
BASE
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4
Exploring the Role of Prosodic Awareness and Executive Functions in Word Reading and Reading Comprehension: a Study of Cognitive Flexibility in Adult Readers
BASE
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5
Cognitive Predictors of English Reading Achievement in Chinese English-Immersion Students
In: Reading psychology. - Philadelphia, Pa. : Taylor & Francis 33 (2012) 5, 423-447
OLC Linguistik
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6
Children's morphological awareness and reading ability
In: Reading and writing. - New York, NY : Springer Science+Business Media 25 (2012) 2, 389-410
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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7
Cross-language activation of phonology in young bilingual readers
In: Reading and writing. - New York, NY : Springer Science+Business Media 25 (2012) 6, 1327-1343
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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8
The development of reading interest and its relation to reading ability
In: Journal of research in reading. - Leeds : Wiley-Blackwell 34 (2011) 3, 263-280
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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9
Sensitivity to linguistic stress, phonological awareness and early reading ability in preschoolers
In: Journal of research in reading. - Leeds : Wiley-Blackwell 33 (2010) 2, 113-127
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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10
An Exploration of Levels of Phonological Awareness as Predictors of Word Reading in Korean Children Learning English
BASE
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11
Flexibility in young second-language learners: examining the language specificity of orthographic processing
In: Journal of research in reading. - Leeds : Wiley-Blackwell 32 (2009) 2, 215-229
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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12
Rhythm and reading development in school-age children : a longitudinal study
In: Journal of research in reading. - Leeds : Wiley-Blackwell 30 (2007) 2, 169-183
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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13
Crossover: the role of morphological awareness in French immersion children's reading
In: Developmental psychology. - Richmond, Va. [u.a.] : American Psychological Association 43 (2007) 3, 732-746
BLLDB
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14
The role of stress processing abilities in the development of bilingual reading
In: Journal of research in reading. - Leeds : Wiley-Blackwell 29 (2006) 3, 349-362
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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15
Flex those muscles : the variety of skills that developing bilingual children use when they read
In: Proceedings of the 30th Annual Boston University Conference on Language Development (Somerville, Mass., 2006), p. 131-141
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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16
Prosody and reading development
Wade-Woolley, Lesly (Hrsg.). - Leeds : Blackwell, 2006
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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17
Early Identification of At-Risk Readers in a Second Language
In: Canadian modern language review. - Toronto : Ontario Modern Language Teachers Association 61 (2004) 1, 11-28
OLC Linguistik
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18
Articles: - First Language Influences on Second Language Word Reading: All Roads Lead to Rome
In: Language learning. - Hoboken, NJ : Wiley 49 (1999) 3, 447-472
OLC Linguistik
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19
Processing inflected morphology in second language word recognition: Russian-speakers and English-speakers read Hebrew
In: Reading and writing. - New York, NY : Springer Science+Business Media 11 (1999) 4, 321-344
OLC Linguistik
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20
Component processes in becoming English-Hebrew biliterate
In: Literacy development in a multilingual context (Mahwah, NJ, 1998), p. 85-110
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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