Frontiers in the Acquisition of Literacy

Learning to read, and to spell are two of the most important cultural skills that must be acquired by children, and for that matter, anyone learning a second language. We are not born with an innate ability to read. A reading system of mental representations that enables us to read must be formed in...

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Superior document:Frontiers Research Topics
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Year of Publication:2015
Language:English
Series:Frontiers Research Topics
Physical Description:1 electronic resource (112 p.)
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spelling Claire M. Fletcher-Flinn auth
Frontiers in the Acquisition of Literacy
Frontiers Media SA 2015
1 electronic resource (112 p.)
text txt rdacontent
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Frontiers Research Topics
Learning to read, and to spell are two of the most important cultural skills that must be acquired by children, and for that matter, anyone learning a second language. We are not born with an innate ability to read. A reading system of mental representations that enables us to read must be formed in the brain. Learning to read in alphabetic orthographies is the acquisition of such a system, which links mental representations of visual symbols (letters) in print words, with pre-existing phonological (sound) and semantic (comprehension) cognitive systems for language. Although spelling draws on the same representational knowledge base and is usually correlated with reading, the acquisition processes involved are not quite the same. Spelling requires the sequential production of letters in words, and at beginning levels there may not be a full degree of integration of phonology with its representation by the orthography. Reading, on the other hand, requires only the recognition of a word for pronunciation. Hence, spelling is more difficult than reading, and learning to spell may necessitate more complete representations, or more conscious access to them. The learning processes that children use to acquire such cognitive systems in the brain, and whether these same processes are universal across different languages and orthographies are central theoretical questions. Most children learn to read and spell their language at the same time, thus the co-ordination of these two facets of literacy acquisition needs explication, as well as the effect of different teaching approaches on acquisition. Lack of progress in either reading and/or spelling is also a major issue of concern for parents and teachers necessitating a cross-disciplinary approach to the problem, encompassing major efforts from researchers in neuroscience, cognitive science, experimental psychology, and education. The purpose of this Research Topic is to summarize and review what has been accomplished so far, and to further explore these general issues. Contributions from different perspectives are welcomed and could include theoretical, computational, and empirical works that focus on the acquisition of literacy, including cross-orthographic research.
English
reading intervention and methodology
Alphasyllabaries
reading comprehension
reading acquisition theory
spelling and specific language impairment
spelling and computers
alphabetism
print vocabulary
cognitive flexibility
predictors of reading
2-88919-656-9
language English
format eBook
author Claire M. Fletcher-Flinn
spellingShingle Claire M. Fletcher-Flinn
Frontiers in the Acquisition of Literacy
Frontiers Research Topics
author_facet Claire M. Fletcher-Flinn
author_variant c m f f cmff
author_sort Claire M. Fletcher-Flinn
title Frontiers in the Acquisition of Literacy
title_full Frontiers in the Acquisition of Literacy
title_fullStr Frontiers in the Acquisition of Literacy
title_full_unstemmed Frontiers in the Acquisition of Literacy
title_auth Frontiers in the Acquisition of Literacy
title_new Frontiers in the Acquisition of Literacy
title_sort frontiers in the acquisition of literacy
series Frontiers Research Topics
series2 Frontiers Research Topics
publisher Frontiers Media SA
publishDate 2015
physical 1 electronic resource (112 p.)
isbn 2-88919-656-9
illustrated Not Illustrated
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is_hierarchy_title Frontiers in the Acquisition of Literacy
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