Exploring Hypotheses About Phonological Awareness, Memory, and Reading Achievement
- 1 September 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Learning Disabilities
- Vol. 35 (5) , 407-424
- https://doi.org/10.1177/00222194020350050201
Abstract
Reading-related skills were tested in adults with and without reading disabilities (RD) and adults with profound hearing impairment (PHI) who did not differ on average Performance IQ. The RD group and the PHI group both demonstrated levels of phonological awareness lower than the control group's, but only the RD group also exhibited deficits in other skills, including verbal short-term memory, morphological awareness, speeded written naming, and reading comprehension. The average reading level of the PHI group was significantly higher than that of the RD group. Three control group members also demonstrated limited phonological awareness without other deficits in a pilot study, performing similarly to the PHI group. The results support other studies suggesting that processes dependent on memory, not solely phonological awareness, may contribute to determining reading achievement.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Phonological awareness, verbal working memory and the acquisition of literacyReading and Writing, 1995
- Cognitive Profiles of Reading-Disabled Children: Comparison of Language Skills in Phonology, Morphology, and SyntaxPsychological Science, 1995
- Cognitive profiles of reading disability: Comparisons of discrepancy and low achievement definitions.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1994
- 3. The Importance of Special Cases: or How the Deaf Might Be, But Are Not, Phonological DyslexicsMind & Language, 1991
- Recall of order information by deaf signers: Phonetic coding in temporal order recallMemory & Cognition, 1990
- Short-term memory coding by deaf signers: The primary language coding hypothesis reconsideredCognitive Psychology, 1990
- Phonological coding in word reading: Evidence from hearing and deaf readersMemory & Cognition, 1987
- Access to Spoken Language and the Acquisition of Orthographic Structure: Evidence from Deaf ReadersThe Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A, 1986
- Silent reading: Insights from second-generation deaf readersCognitive Psychology, 1983
- SHORT‐TERM MEMORY PROCESSES IN THE DEAFBritish Journal of Psychology, 1970