Phonology-based reading instruction to improve dyslexic students' early reading ability

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Abstract

Dyslexic students struggle to learn how to read. Yet, few studies reported on how dyslexic students learn to read. In this respect, special education teachers have adopted a myriad of ways to overcome reading problems of the dyslexic students. To respond to this need, the purpose of this study is to examine how phonology-based reading instruction could help dyslexic students improve their early reading abilities. Grounded in a mixed methods research design, four dyslexic students of primary school were recruited to participate in this study. The results of the study showed that phonology-based reading instruction had a positive impact on improving the dyslexic students' early reading abilities, particularly in Bahasa Indonesian-medium reading texts. This suggests that phonology-based reading instruction could effectively be implemented if special education teachers could enact phonological instruction as a prerequisite for identifying the students' early reading ability and phonics instruction as an instructional reinforcement for building students' early reading repertoire.

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APA

Novianti, R., Syihabuddin, & Rochyadi, E. (2019). Phonology-based reading instruction to improve dyslexic students’ early reading ability. Indonesian Journal of Applied Linguistics, 9(2), 443–451. https://doi.org/10.17509/ijal.v9i2.20242

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