Literature DB >> 18605821

On the Anglocentricities of current reading research and practice: the perils of overreliance on an "outlier" orthography.

David L Share1.   

Abstract

In this critique of current reading research and practice, the author contends that the extreme ambiguity of English spelling-sound correspondence has confined reading science to an insular, Anglocentric research agenda addressing theoretical and applied issues with limited relevance for a universal science of reading. The unique problems posed by this "outlier" orthography, the author argues, have focused disproportionate attention on oral reading accuracy at the expense of silent reading, meaning access, and fluency, and have significantly distorted theorizing with regard to many issues-including phonological awareness, early reading instruction, the architecture of stage models of reading development, the definition and remediation of reading disability, and the role of lexical-semantic and supralexical information in word recognition. The dominant theoretical paradigm in contemporary (word) reading research--the Coltheart/Baron dual-route model (see, e.g., J. Baron, 1977; M. Coltheart, 1978) and, in large measure, its connectionist rivals--arose largely in response to English spelling-sound obtuseness. The model accounts for a range of English-language findings, but it is ill-equipped to serve the interests of a universal science of reading chiefly because it overlooks a fundamental unfamiliar-to-familiar/novice-to-expert dualism applicable to all words and readers in all orthographies. PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2008 APA

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18605821     DOI: 10.1037/0033-2909.134.4.584

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Bull        ISSN: 0033-2909            Impact factor:   17.737


  88 in total

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9.  Acquiring reading and vocabulary in Dutch and English: the effect of concurrent instruction.

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10.  A common left occipito-temporal dysfunction in developmental dyslexia and acquired letter-by-letter reading?

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