| Literature DB >> 20445202 |
Phil D Liu1, Catherine McBride-Chang, Anita M-Y Wong, Twila Tardif, Stephanie F Stokes, Paul Fletcher.
Abstract
This study investigated the extent to which language skills at ages 2 to 4 years could discriminate Hong Kong Chinese poor from adequate readers at age 7. Selected were 41 poor readers (age M = 87.6 months) and 41 adequate readers (age M = 88.3 months). The two groups were matched on age, parents' education levels, and nonverbal intelligence. The following language tasks were tested at different ages: vocabulary checklist and Cantonese articulation test at age 2; nonword repetition, Cantonese articulation, and receptive grammar at age 3; and nonword repetition, receptive grammar, sentence imitation, and story comprehension at age 4. Significant differences between the poor and adequate readers were found in the age 2 vocabulary knowledge, age 3 Cantonese articulation, and age 4 receptive grammar skill, sentence imitation, and story comprehension. Among these measures, sentence imitation showed the greatest power in discriminating poor and adequate readers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20445202 DOI: 10.1177/0022219410369084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Learn Disabil ISSN: 0022-2194