Early Language Development and Kindergarten Phonological Awareness as Predictors of Reading Problems: From 3 to 8 Years of Age

  • Olofsson Å
  • Niedersøe J
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Abstract

At the end of Grade 4, 481 children on the Danish island of Bornholm were screened using group tests for sentence reading. For 205 of these children, language and speech data from the speech therapist's screening at age 3 were available, as well as language comprehension and linguistic awareness data from the kindergarten year (age 6) and word decoding measures in Grades 2 and 3. A path analysis revealed significant paths from early language abilities at age 3 through expressive and receptive language in kindergarten via language awareness in kindergarten and word decoding in Grade 2 to sentence reading in Grades 3 and 4. The subgroup of children with parents who had reported a history of reading problems at school entry scored significantly below average on sentence reading in Grade 4. The subgroup of children that were reported to show a very low interest in books and story reading before age 5 also scored low on sentence reading in Grade 4. Statistically significant but weak relationships were also found between parents' educational background, parents' library visits, and number of books at home and the child's reading ability in Grade 4.

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APA

Olofsson, Å., & Niedersøe, J. (1997). Early Language Development and Kindergarten Phonological Awareness as Predictors of Reading Problems: From 3 to 8 Years of Age. In Cross-Language Studies of Learning to Read and Spell (pp. 289–303). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-1197-5_16

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