We investigated the longitudinal links between parental teaching of reading and spelling and children's word reading and spelling skills. Data of 244 Lithuanian parent-child dyads were analyzed, who were followed across three time points: end of kindergarten (T1; = 6.88; 116 girls), beginning of Grade 1 (T2), and end of Grade 1 (T3). The children's word reading and spelling skills were tested, and the parents answered questionnaires on the frequency with which they taught their children reading and spelling. Overall, the results showed that the parents were responsive to their children's skill levels across the domains of reading and spelling and across time (i.e., the transition from kindergarten to Grade 1 and across Grade 1). However, differences between the domains of reading and spelling were also observed. In particular, in the domain of reading and across the transition from kindergarten to Grade 1, the parents responded to their children's skill levels by increasing the time spent teaching children with poor word reading skills, and decreasing the teaching time for the children with good word reading skills. In contrast, as spelling skills may require more time to develop, parents maintained similar frequencies of teaching spelling across the transition to Grade 1 for all children, and only parents of good spellers taught less spelling at the end of Grade 1 than parents of children with poor and average word spelling skills.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.610870 | DOI Listing |
Front Psychol
January 2025
Institute of Special Needs Education, Bern University of Teacher Education, Bern, Switzerland.
Introduction: Learning to write is a complex task involving peripheral (e.g., handwriting speed and legibility) and central (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLang Speech Hear Serv Sch
January 2025
Faculté de Psychologie et des Sciences de l'Education, Université de Genève, Suisse.
Purpose: Graphotactic regularities are statistical regularities governing orthographic systems that children are sensitive to from the start of their literacy learning. The current study observed changes in children's sensitivity to a set of graphotactic patterns across different grades in elementary school and measured the contribution of skills such as expressive spelling, reading fluency, nonverbal reasoning, and receptive vocabulary to children's sensitivity of these graphotactic regularities.
Method: One thousand one hundred one French-speaking children in Grades 1-5 completed a writing under a dictation task, a text reading fluency task, and a pseudo-orthographic choice task involving different graphotactic regularities.
BMC Psychol
December 2024
Department of Paediatrics, School of Medical Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia Health Campus, Kubang Kerian, Kelantan, 16150, Malaysia.
Children (Basel)
October 2024
Georgia Southern University, Statesboro, GA 30458, USA.
This study aimed to examine metalinguistic skills and reading processes in children diagnosed with ADHD, compared to a matched control group. An explanatory experimental design was employed, involving a sample of 194 children from Manizales, comprising 97 children diagnosed with ADHD and 97 controls. The study utilized tasks from the Children's Neuropsychological Assessment (CNA) protocol to assess metalinguistic and reading abilities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Intell
November 2024
Department of Educational Psychology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045, USA.
Broadly, individuals' cognitive abilities influence their academic skills, but the significance and strength of specific cognitive abilities varies across academic domains and may vary across age. Simultaneous analyses of data from many tests and cross-battery analyses can address inconsistent findings from prior studies by creating comprehensively defined constructs, which allow for greater generalizability of findings. The purpose of this study was to examine the cross-battery direct effects and developmental differences in youths' cognitive abilities on their basic reading abilities, as well as the relations between their reading and writing achievement.
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