Orthographic influences, vocabulary development and phonological awareness in deaf children who use cochlear implants
Orthographic influences, vocabulary development and phonological awareness in deaf children who use cochlear implants
In the current study, we explore the influence of orthographic knowledge on phonological awareness in children with cochlear implants and compare developmental associations to those found for hearing children matched for word reading level or chronological age. We show an influence of orthographic knowledge on syllable and phoneme awareness in deaf and hearing children, but no orthographic effect on rhyme awareness. Nonorthographic rhyme awareness was a significant predictor of reading outcomes for all groups. However, whereas receptive vocabulary knowledge was the most important predictor of word reading variance in the cochlear implant group, rhyme awareness was the only important predictor of word reading variance in the reading level matched hearing group. Both vocabulary and rhyme awareness were equally important in predicting reading in the chronological age-matched hearing group. The data suggest that both deaf and hearing children are influenced by orthography when making phonological judgments, and that phonological awareness and vocabulary are both important for reading development
659-684
James, Deborah
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Rajput, Kaukab
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Brinton, Julie
573e7087-d630-44ad-82f6-d75f808e2538
Goswami, Usha
d31da211-5a9b-4a09-af8d-fa96f19dbbad
October 2009
James, Deborah
9bdb6f68-1386-43b8-8734-ede3d644003f
Rajput, Kaukab
44123313-4e9d-406c-976e-1954f89e63d8
Brinton, Julie
573e7087-d630-44ad-82f6-d75f808e2538
Goswami, Usha
d31da211-5a9b-4a09-af8d-fa96f19dbbad
James, Deborah, Rajput, Kaukab, Brinton, Julie and Goswami, Usha
(2009)
Orthographic influences, vocabulary development and phonological awareness in deaf children who use cochlear implants.
Applied Linguistics, 30, .
(doi:10.1017/S0142716409990063).
Abstract
In the current study, we explore the influence of orthographic knowledge on phonological awareness in children with cochlear implants and compare developmental associations to those found for hearing children matched for word reading level or chronological age. We show an influence of orthographic knowledge on syllable and phoneme awareness in deaf and hearing children, but no orthographic effect on rhyme awareness. Nonorthographic rhyme awareness was a significant predictor of reading outcomes for all groups. However, whereas receptive vocabulary knowledge was the most important predictor of word reading variance in the cochlear implant group, rhyme awareness was the only important predictor of word reading variance in the reading level matched hearing group. Both vocabulary and rhyme awareness were equally important in predicting reading in the chronological age-matched hearing group. The data suggest that both deaf and hearing children are influenced by orthography when making phonological judgments, and that phonological awareness and vocabulary are both important for reading development
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Published date: October 2009
Organisations:
Human Sciences Group
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Local EPrints ID: 71544
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/71544
ISSN: 0142-6001
PURE UUID: 5020c6bf-d911-4236-b643-64046e77baf9
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Date deposited: 11 Mar 2010
Last modified: 13 Mar 2024 20:30
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Author:
Deborah James
Author:
Kaukab Rajput
Author:
Julie Brinton
Author:
Usha Goswami
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