Does a truly symmetrically transparent orthography exist? Spelling is more difficult than reading even in an orthography considered highly transparent for both reading and spelling

被引:0
作者
Selma Babayiğit
机构
[1] University of the West of England (Bristol),Department of Social Sciences
来源
Reading and Writing | 2022年 / 35卷
关键词
Turkish; Spelling; Reading; Ğ; Soft G; Orthographic transparency;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Although we know that spelling develops more slowly than reading in asymmetrically transparent orthographies, such as Italian, we do not know whether spelling lags behind reading in orthographies considered symmetrically transparent for both spelling and reading. This is because reading and spelling skills are rarely tested on the same lexical items, which impedes their direct comparison. This study aimed to address this issue by comparing children’s reading and spelling accuracy on the same lexical items in Turkish, which is highly transparent for both reading and spelling. The study also examined an exceptional case, namely letter Ğ, which can cause phonemic ambiguity and potentially complicate spelling but not reading accuracy in Turkish. Through two experiments, children’s reading and spelling accuracy rates were tested on the same nonword and real word items at grade 1 (Experiment 1, N = 40, Mage = 80.93 months, SD = 2.79 months; Experiment 2, N = 39; Mage = 80.97 months, SD = 2.80 months). The consistent findings from nonwords and words (with Ğ or without Ğ) confirmed that spelling development lagged behind reading development in Turkish and that Ğ reduced spelling accuracy but had no effect on reading accuracy. These findings raise questions about the notion of symmetrical transparency: spelling is less transparent and cognitively more demanding than reading even in orthographies considered highly transparent for both reading and spelling. The case of Ğ highlights that even the most transparent orthographies may have exceptional cases that can differentially affect reading and spelling accuracy and therefore the developmental trajectories of reading and spelling skills. Clearly, spelling words as they are heard may not always result in accurate spellings even in Turkish and children should be explicitly taught about the phonemic ambiguity that Ğ may cause.
引用
收藏
页码:2453 / 2472
页数:19
相关论文
共 62 条
  • [1] Arfé B(2016)The effect of language specific factors on early written composition: The role of spelling, oral language and text generation skills in a shallow orthography Reading and Writing 29 501-527
  • [2] Dockrell JE(2003)Learning to read: English in comparison to six more regular orthographies Applied Psycholinguistics 24 621-635
  • [3] De Bernardi B(2007)Preliterate phonological awareness and early literacy skills in Turkish Journal of Research in Reading 30 394-413
  • [4] Aro M(2010)Component Processes of Early Reading, Spelling, and Narrative Writing Skills in Turkish: A Longitudinal Study Reading and Writing 23 539-568
  • [5] Wimmer H(2012)Linguistic Pattern Analysis of Misspellings of Typically Developing Writers in Grades 1-9 Journal of Speech Language Hearing Research 55 1587-1599
  • [6] Babayiǧit S(2004)Spelling development in alphabetic writing systems: a cross-linguistic perspective European Psychologist 9 3-14
  • [7] Stainthorp R(1995)Acquisition of reading and written spelling in a transparent orthography: Two non parallel processes? Reading and Writing 7 9-22
  • [8] Babayiğit S(2005)Learning to read words: theories, findings and issues Scientific Studies of Reading 9 167-188
  • [9] Stainthorp R(2002)Ilkögretim Okullarına Devam Eden Türk Çocuklarının Sınıf Düzeylerine Göre Okuma Hızı ve Yazım Hataları Normlarının Geliştirilmesi [Development of Grade Level Norms for Reading Speed and Writing Errors of Turkish Elementary School Children] Türk Psikiyatri Dergisi[Turkish Journal of Psychiatry] 13 5-13
  • [10] Bahr RH(2012)Longitudinal predictors of reading and spelling across languages varying in orthographic consistency Reading and Writing 25 321-346