Predicting individual differences in early literacy acquisition in German: The role of speech and language processing skills and letter knowledge.

Typeset version

 

TY  - JOUR
  - Fricke, S., Szczerbinski, M., Stackhouse, J., ; Fox-Boyer, A. V.
  - 2008
  - Unknown
  - Written Language and Literacy
  - Predicting individual differences in early literacy acquisition in German: The role of speech and language processing skills and letter knowledge.
  - Published
  - ()
  - 11
  - 2
  - 101
  - 143
  - International research findings have repeatedly confirmed the significance of speech and language processing skills and letter knowledge for successful literacy acquisition. However, the importance of these skills for early literacy success in German speakers remains uncertain. The present longitudinal study aimed to explore this issue. Sixty-nine German-speaking children were assessed in nursery a few months before starting school (mean age 5;11) and in Grade 1 (mean age 6;11) with tests of phonological awareness, rapid automatized naming, expressive vocabulary, grammar comprehension, letter knowledge, and nonverbal reasoning. Grade 1 assessments also included measures of reading accuracy, speed, comprehension, and spelling. The results confirmed that speech and language processing skills and letter knowledge before and around the time of school enrolment explain individual differences in early literacy development, with letter knowledge and phonological awareness emerging as most important predictors. No variance in literacy performance was uniquely predicted by nonverbal reasoning.
  - 10.1075/wll.11.2.02fri
DA  - 2008/NaN
ER  - 
@article{V104778515,
   = {Fricke, S., Szczerbinski, M., Stackhouse, J.,  and  Fox-Boyer, A. V.},
   = {2008},
   = {Unknown},
   = {Written Language and Literacy},
   = {Predicting individual differences in early literacy acquisition in German: The role of speech and language processing skills and letter knowledge.},
   = {Published},
   = {()},
   = {11},
   = {2},
  pages = {101--143},
   = {{International research findings have repeatedly confirmed the significance of speech and language processing skills and letter knowledge for successful literacy acquisition. However, the importance of these skills for early literacy success in German speakers remains uncertain. The present longitudinal study aimed to explore this issue. Sixty-nine German-speaking children were assessed in nursery a few months before starting school (mean age 5;11) and in Grade 1 (mean age 6;11) with tests of phonological awareness, rapid automatized naming, expressive vocabulary, grammar comprehension, letter knowledge, and nonverbal reasoning. Grade 1 assessments also included measures of reading accuracy, speed, comprehension, and spelling. The results confirmed that speech and language processing skills and letter knowledge before and around the time of school enrolment explain individual differences in early literacy development, with letter knowledge and phonological awareness emerging as most important predictors. No variance in literacy performance was uniquely predicted by nonverbal reasoning.}},
   = {10.1075/wll.11.2.02fri},
  source = {IRIS}
}
AUTHORSFricke, S., Szczerbinski, M., Stackhouse, J., ; Fox-Boyer, A. V.
YEAR2008
MONTHUnknown
JOURNAL_CODEWritten Language and Literacy
TITLEPredicting individual differences in early literacy acquisition in German: The role of speech and language processing skills and letter knowledge.
STATUSPublished
TIMES_CITED()
SEARCH_KEYWORD
VOLUME11
ISSUE2
START_PAGE101
END_PAGE143
ABSTRACTInternational research findings have repeatedly confirmed the significance of speech and language processing skills and letter knowledge for successful literacy acquisition. However, the importance of these skills for early literacy success in German speakers remains uncertain. The present longitudinal study aimed to explore this issue. Sixty-nine German-speaking children were assessed in nursery a few months before starting school (mean age 5;11) and in Grade 1 (mean age 6;11) with tests of phonological awareness, rapid automatized naming, expressive vocabulary, grammar comprehension, letter knowledge, and nonverbal reasoning. Grade 1 assessments also included measures of reading accuracy, speed, comprehension, and spelling. The results confirmed that speech and language processing skills and letter knowledge before and around the time of school enrolment explain individual differences in early literacy development, with letter knowledge and phonological awareness emerging as most important predictors. No variance in literacy performance was uniquely predicted by nonverbal reasoning.
PUBLISHER_LOCATION
ISBN_ISSN
EDITION
URL
DOI_LINK10.1075/wll.11.2.02fri
FUNDING_BODY
GRANT_DETAILS