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A Longitudinal Analysis of the Connection Between Oral Language and Early Reading

To clarify the relationship between oral language and early reading development, the authors administered to 39 children a broad range of oral language measures in 3 areas (metalinguistics, structural language, and narrative discourse); measures of background variables (IQ, socioeconomic status, eth...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Journal of educational research (Washington, D.C.) D.C.), 2002-05, Vol.95 (5), p.259-272
Main Authors: Roth, Froma P., Speece, Deborah L., Cooper, David H.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:To clarify the relationship between oral language and early reading development, the authors administered to 39 children a broad range of oral language measures in 3 areas (metalinguistics, structural language, and narrative discourse); measures of background variables (IQ, socioeconomic status, ethnicity, gender, family literacy); and measures of reading ability (word recognition, pseudoword reading, passage comprehension) in kindergarten and in 1st and 2nd grades. The authors used regression analyses to identify parsimonious models that explained variance in early reading. The main finding of the study was that semantic abilities (i.e., oral definitions and word retrieval), not phonological awareness, predicted 2nd-grade reading comprehension. As expected, phonological awareness skill in kindergarten predicted single-word reading at 1st and 2nd grades. The finding that semantic skills predicted passage comprehension suggests that the importance of different oral language skills to early reading varies as a function of language domain, reading skill, and measurement point.
ISSN:0022-0671
1940-0675
DOI:10.1080/00220670209596600