Examining Relations Among Expressive Phonology, Phonological Processing, and Early Decoding Skills in Children

This study examined the relations among expressive phonology, phonological sensitivity, and early decoding skills in children attending kindergarten through 2nd grade. Extant literature suggests that children with disordered speech may be at additional risk for reading difficulties; however, due to...

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Other Authors: McDowell, Kimberly Dawn (authoraut)
Format: Others
Language:English
English
Published: Florida State University
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Online Access:http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-2572
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spelling ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_1808472020-06-09T03:09:29Z Examining Relations Among Expressive Phonology, Phonological Processing, and Early Decoding Skills in Children McDowell, Kimberly Dawn (authoraut) Goldstein, Howard (professor directing dissertation) Lonigan, Christopher (outside committee member) Trautman, Lisa (committee member) Woods, Juliann (committee member) School of Communication Science and Disorders (degree granting department) Florida State University (degree granting institution) Text text Florida State University Florida State University English eng 1 online resource computer application/pdf This study examined the relations among expressive phonology, phonological sensitivity, and early decoding skills in children attending kindergarten through 2nd grade. Extant literature suggests that children with disordered speech may be at additional risk for reading difficulties; however, due to methodological shortcomings, findings from previous research are questionable. A total of 140 children between the ages of 5- and 8-years of age were randomly selected from a pool of 392 children recruited from local schools to participate in assessments involving oral language, expressive phonology, phonological sensitivity, and early decoding skills. Results from correlational analyses revealed significant relations between most measures of phonological sensitivity, expressive phonology, and decoding skills, even after partialling out variance common to oral language. Additionally, results from simultaneous multiple regression analyses demonstrated that the Phonological Sensitivity, Lexical Access and Multisyllabic speech production jointly predicted early decoding skills (ÄR2 = .34). Phonological Memory and single-naming speech production did not. Additionally, Phonological Sensitivity, Lexical Access, and Multisyllabic speech production each predicted unique variance in Decoding. Finally, hierarchical multiple regression results indicated that whereas for the youngest group of children, those with poorer speech skills (as measured by multisyllabic word productions) or poorer phonological sensitivity skills also displayed poorer decoding skills, this relation was not found to be significant for the older children. Age did not moderate the relations between Lexical Access and Decoding. Results support extant literature suggesting that reading deficits stem from an underlying phonological deficit and that speech may serve as an early indicator of potential reading problems. Clinical implications include the need to use more sensitive, complex expressive phonological measures and to incorporate exposure to written language into speech therapy sessions. Additionally, future research should focus on extending current findings by examining the relations among speech and reading in a longitudinal nature. A Dissertation submitted to the Department of Communication Disorders in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Spring Semester, 2004. April 7, 2004. Phonological Processing, Phonological Sensitivity, Decoding, Speech, Reading Includes bibliographical references. Howard Goldstein, Professor Directing Dissertation; Christopher Lonigan, Outside Committee Member; Lisa Trautman, Committee Member; Juliann Woods, Committee Member. Communication Communicative disorders FSU_migr_etd-2572 http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-2572 This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s). The copyright in theses and dissertations completed at Florida State University is held by the students who author them. http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A180847/datastream/TN/view/Examining%20Relations%20Among%20Expressive%20Phonology%2C%20Phonological%20Processing%2C%20and%20Early%20Decoding%20Skills%20in%20Children.jpg
collection NDLTD
language English
English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Communication
Communicative disorders
spellingShingle Communication
Communicative disorders
Examining Relations Among Expressive Phonology, Phonological Processing, and Early Decoding Skills in Children
description This study examined the relations among expressive phonology, phonological sensitivity, and early decoding skills in children attending kindergarten through 2nd grade. Extant literature suggests that children with disordered speech may be at additional risk for reading difficulties; however, due to methodological shortcomings, findings from previous research are questionable. A total of 140 children between the ages of 5- and 8-years of age were randomly selected from a pool of 392 children recruited from local schools to participate in assessments involving oral language, expressive phonology, phonological sensitivity, and early decoding skills. Results from correlational analyses revealed significant relations between most measures of phonological sensitivity, expressive phonology, and decoding skills, even after partialling out variance common to oral language. Additionally, results from simultaneous multiple regression analyses demonstrated that the Phonological Sensitivity, Lexical Access and Multisyllabic speech production jointly predicted early decoding skills (ÄR2 = .34). Phonological Memory and single-naming speech production did not. Additionally, Phonological Sensitivity, Lexical Access, and Multisyllabic speech production each predicted unique variance in Decoding. Finally, hierarchical multiple regression results indicated that whereas for the youngest group of children, those with poorer speech skills (as measured by multisyllabic word productions) or poorer phonological sensitivity skills also displayed poorer decoding skills, this relation was not found to be significant for the older children. Age did not moderate the relations between Lexical Access and Decoding. Results support extant literature suggesting that reading deficits stem from an underlying phonological deficit and that speech may serve as an early indicator of potential reading problems. Clinical implications include the need to use more sensitive, complex expressive phonological measures and to incorporate exposure to written language into speech therapy sessions. Additionally, future research should focus on extending current findings by examining the relations among speech and reading in a longitudinal nature. === A Dissertation submitted to the Department of Communication Disorders in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. === Spring Semester, 2004. === April 7, 2004. === Phonological Processing, Phonological Sensitivity, Decoding, Speech, Reading === Includes bibliographical references. === Howard Goldstein, Professor Directing Dissertation; Christopher Lonigan, Outside Committee Member; Lisa Trautman, Committee Member; Juliann Woods, Committee Member.
author2 McDowell, Kimberly Dawn (authoraut)
author_facet McDowell, Kimberly Dawn (authoraut)
title Examining Relations Among Expressive Phonology, Phonological Processing, and Early Decoding Skills in Children
title_short Examining Relations Among Expressive Phonology, Phonological Processing, and Early Decoding Skills in Children
title_full Examining Relations Among Expressive Phonology, Phonological Processing, and Early Decoding Skills in Children
title_fullStr Examining Relations Among Expressive Phonology, Phonological Processing, and Early Decoding Skills in Children
title_full_unstemmed Examining Relations Among Expressive Phonology, Phonological Processing, and Early Decoding Skills in Children
title_sort examining relations among expressive phonology, phonological processing, and early decoding skills in children
publisher Florida State University
url http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-2572
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