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Breaking the reading code: Letter knowledge when children break the reading code the first year in school

Breaking the reading code: Letter knowledge when children break the reading code the first year in school


Title: Breaking the reading code: Letter knowledge when children break the reading code the first year in school
Author: Sigmundsson, Hermundur   orcid.org/0000-0003-2333-5711
Haga, Monika   orcid.org/0000-0002-3198-4351
Ofteland, Greta Storm
Solstad, Trygve
Date: 2020-04
Language: English
Scope: 100756
University/Institute: Háskólinn í Reykjavík
Reykjavik University
School: Samfélagssvið (HR)
School of Social Sciences (RU)
Department: Íþróttafræðideild (HR)
Department of Sport Science (RU)
Series: New Ideas in Psychology;57
ISSN: 0732-118X
1873-3522 (eISSN)
DOI: 10.1016/j.newideapsych.2019.100756
Subject: Psychology (miscellaneous); General Psychology; Children; Gender differences; Letter sound knowledge; Longitudinal studies; Sálfræði; Börn; Kynjamunur; Læsi; Rittákn; Hljóð
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/2452

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Citation:

Sigmundsson, H., Haga, M., Ofteland, G. S., & Solstad, T. (2020). Breaking the reading code: Letter knowledge when children break the reading code the first year in school. New Ideas in Psychology, 57, 100756. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.newideapsych.2019.100756

Abstract:

The aim of this study was to examine when children learn to read and how learning to read depends on a foundation of alphabetic knowledge. 356 children aged 5–6 years completed assessments of letter-sound knowledge, i.e. the names and sounds of uppercase and lowercase letters of the Norwegian alphabet. Each child was tested at the start, the middle and the end of the school year. The time that each child broke the reading code was also recorded. The results indicated that 11% of the children knew how to read before starting school and 27% of the children did not learn to read by the end of the first year. The remaining children typically knew 21 uppercase letter sounds before they were first able to read, and only a few (<5%) knew less than 11 uppercase letter sounds when they broke the reading code. The average of all four letter-scores at the time they broke the reading code was 19 ± 5 letters (mean ± standard deviation). Although letter sound knowledge was associated with the ability to read, it was not sufficient for breaking the reading code. 40% of children who knew 23 letter sounds or more, enough to read more than 80% of the most common Norwegian words, and 15% of children who knew all 29 letter sounds still could not read. Based on these data, it seems reasonable to advocate learning letter-sound correspondences early in the first year of school to form the best possible basis for breaking the reading code.

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This article is available under the Creative Commons CC-BY-NC-ND license and permits non-commercial use of the work as published, without adaptation or alteration provided the work is fully attributed. For commercial reuse, permission must be requested below.

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