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Beyond phonological skills: broader language skills contribute to the development of reading

Abstract:
This paper reports a study that followed the development of reading skills in 72 children from the age of 8.5 to 13 years. Each child was administered tests of reading, oral language, phonological skills and nonverbal ability at time 1 and their performance on tests of reading comprehension, word recognition, nonword decoding and exception word reading was assessed at time 2. In addition to phonological skills, three measures of non-phonological oral language tapping vocabulary knowledge and listening comprehension were unique concurrent predictors of both reading comprehension and word recognition at time 1. Importantly, all three measures of oral language skill also contributed unique variance to individual differences in reading comprehension, word recognition and exception word reading four and a half years later, even when the autoregressive effects of early reading skill were controlled. Moreover, the extent to which a child's word recognition departed from the level predicted from their decoding ability correlated with their oral language skills. These findings suggest that children's oral language proficiency, as well as their phonological skills, influences the course of reading development.
Publication status:
Published

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Publisher copy:
10.1111/j.1467-9817.2004.00238.x

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Journal:
JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN READING More from this journal
Volume:
27
Issue:
4
Pages:
342-356
Publication date:
2004-11-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1467-9817
ISSN:
0141-0423


Language:
English
Pubs id:
pubs:18144
UUID:
uuid:50f3c681-b1ea-4cfc-bc97-1ae550de7884
Local pid:
pubs:18144
Source identifiers:
18144
Deposit date:
2012-12-19

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