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Beginning to read across languages varying in orthographic consistency: Comparing the effects of non-cognitive and cognitive predictors
Authors:George Manolitsis   George Georgiou   Kathy Stephenson  Rauno Parrila
Affiliation:aUniversity of Crete, Department of Preschool Education, University Campus of Gallos, 74100 Rethymnon, Crete, Greece;bUniversity of Alberta, Department of Educational Psychology, Education North 6-102, Edmonton-Alberta T6G 2G5, Canada
Abstract:We examined whether the effect that different non-cognitive and cognitive factors have on reading acquisition varies as a function of orthographic consistency. Canadian (n = 77) and Greek (n = 95) children attending kindergarten were examined on general cognitive ability, phonological sensitivity, and letter knowledge. The parents of the children responded to a questionnaire on home literacy activities and the teachers reported on children's task-focused behaviour. In Grades 1 and 2 the children's word decoding and reading fluency were assessed. Results indicated that direct teaching of letter names and sounds at home was associated with better letter knowledge in both languages. Task-focused behaviour and letter knowledge in kindergarten predicted significantly nonword decoding in Grade 1, but their effect was stronger in English than in Greek. This pattern was not replicated for reading fluency in Grade 2.
Keywords:Home literacy environment   Task-focused behaviour   Emergent literacy   Reading development   Cross-linguistic comparison
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