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Educational Psychology
An International Journal of Experimental Educational Psychology
Volume 37, 2017 - Issue 10
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Articles

Prosodic awareness and children’s multisyllabic word reading

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Pages 1222-1241 | Received 15 Oct 2015, Accepted 12 May 2017, Published online: 24 May 2017
 

Abstract

Prosodic awareness (the rhythmic patterning of speech) accounts for unique variance in reading development. However, studies have thus far focused on early readers and utilised literacy measures which fail to distinguish between monosyllabic and multisyllabic words. The current study investigated the factors that are specifically associated with multisyllabic word reading in a sample of 50 children aged between 7 and 8 years. Prosodic awareness was the strongest predictor of multisyllabic word reading accuracy, after controlling for phoneme awareness, morphological awareness, vocabulary and short-term memory. Children also made surprisingly few phonemic errors while, in contrast, errors of stress assignment were commonplace. Prosodic awareness was also the strongest predictor of stress placement errors, although this finding was not significant. Prosodic skills may play an increasingly important role in literacy performance as children encounter more complex reading materials. Once phoneme-level skills are mastered, prosodic awareness is arguably the strongest predictor of single word reading.

Acknowledgements

The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of the schools, teachers, parents and children who took part in this study, without which the study would not have been possible.

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