| Literature DB >> 28686300 |
Rebecca Treiman1, Brett Kessler1, Kelly Boland1, Hayley Clocksin1, Zhengdao Chen1.
Abstract
The authors analyzed the spellings of 179 U.S. children (age = 3 years, 2 months-5 years, 6 months) who were prephonological spellers, in that they wrote using letters that did not reflect the phonemes in the target items. Supporting the idea that children use their statistical learning skills to learn about the outer form of writing before they begin to spell phonologically, older prephonological spellers showed more knowledge about English letter patterns than did younger prephonological spellers. The written productions of older prephonological spellers were rated by adults as more similar to English words than were the productions of younger prephonological spellers. The older children s spellings were also more wordlike on several objective measures, including length, variability of letters within words, and digram frequency.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28686300 PMCID: PMC5756699 DOI: 10.1111/cdev.12893
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Dev ISSN: 0009-3920