Contribution of morphological awareness to reading fluency of children with and without dyslexia: evidence from a transparent orthography

被引:0
作者
Sophia Giazitzidou
Susana Padeliadu
机构
[1] Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,School of Philosophy and Education
来源
Annals of Dyslexia | 2022年 / 72卷
关键词
Dyslexia; Morphology; Reading fluency; Transparent orthography;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The goal of this study was to investigate the contribution of morphological awareness to reading fluency of children with and without dyslexia in a transparent orthography, such as the Greek one. The sample consisted of 256 Greek-speaking children (2nd grade: 32 dyslexic and 105 typical readers, 5th grade: 28 dyslexic and 91 typical readers). Morphological awareness was assessed with three tasks, examining inflectional, derivational, and compounding morphology. Reading fluency was evaluated at word, text, and silent level. The results indicated that dyslexic children both in 2nd and 5th grade face significant difficulties in inflectional, derivational, and compounding morphology compared to their peers. Hierarchical regression analyses revealed that morphological awareness significantly contributed to reading fluency of children with and without dyslexia, after controlling for non-verbal intelligence, vocabulary, and phonological awareness. Among typical readers, results indicated that inflectional, derivational, and compounding morphology had a small but significant effect on word, text, and silent reading fluency in 2nd grade and derivational and inflectional morphology on text and silent reading fluency in 5th grade, after controlling for non-verbal intelligence, vocabulary, and phonological awareness. For dyslexic children, a moderate-to-large effect of inflectional and derivational morphology on text and word reading fluency was restricted to 2nd grade. Overall, morphological skills may play a supportive role in reading fluency of Greek children in first and last elementary grades. On the other hand, for Greek children facing reading problems morphological skills appeared to have a strong role in reading fluency only in first grades. Our study provided some preliminary data for the dyslexics’ ability of morphological processing as a scaffolding skill for reading fluency. Implications of these findings for education are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:509 / 531
页数:22
相关论文
共 131 条
[1]  
Apel K(2013)Using multiple measures of morphological awareness to assess its relation to reading Topics in Language Disorders 33 42-56
[2]  
Diehm E(2017)Growth in oral reading fluency in a semitransparent orthography: Concurrent and predictive relations with reading proficiency in Norwegian, Grades 2–5 Reading Research Quarterly 52 177-201
[3]  
Apel L(2016)Morphological spelling in spite of phonological deficits: Evidence from children with dyslexia and otitis media Applied Psycholinguistics 37 1439-1460
[4]  
Arnesen A(2010)Word morphology enhances reading fluency in children with developmental dyslexia Linguee Linguaggio 9 177-198
[5]  
Braeken J(2002)How early does morpholexical reading develop in readers of a shallow orthography? Brain and Language 81 568-586
[6]  
Baker S(2008)Morpheme-based reading aloud: Evidence from dyslexic and skilled Italian readers Cognition 108 243-262
[7]  
Meek-Hansen W(2005)Exploring the role of morphemes in word reading Reading Research Quarterly 40 428-449
[8]  
Ogden T(2004)Morphological awareness in developmental dyslexia Annals of Dyslexia 54 114-138
[9]  
Melby-Lervåg M(2015)Early predictors of phonological and morphological awareness and the link with reading: Evidence from children with different patterns of early deficit Applied Psycholinguistics 36 509-531
[10]  
Breadmore HL(2008)The metric matters: Determining the extent of children's knowledge of morphological spelling regularities Developmental Science 11 396-406