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Phonemic effects in the silent reading of hearing and deaf children
Authors:John L. Locke
Affiliation:Institute for Child Behavior and Development Champaign, Illinois, USA
Abstract:Twenty-four deaf and hearing children silently read a printed passage while crossing out all detected cases of a pre-specified target letter. Target letters appeared in phonemically modal form, a category loosely analogous to “pronounced” letters (e.g., the g in badge), and in phonemically nonmodal form, a class which included “silent” letters and those pronounced in somewhat atypical fashion (e.g., the g in rough). Hearing children detected significantly more modal than nonmodal forms, an expected pronunciation effect for individuals in whom speech and reading ordinarily are in close functional relationship. The deaf detected exactly as many modal as nonmodal letter forms, provoking the interpretation that deaf children, as a group, do not effectively mediate print with speech. The deaf also were relatively unaffected by grammatical class, while hearing subjects were considerably more likely to detect a target letter if it occured in a content word than a functor term. Questions pertaining to reading instruction in the deaf are discussed.
Keywords:Requests for reprints should be addressed to John L. Locke   Institute for Child Behavior and Development   University of Illinois   51 Gerty Drive   Champaign   Illinois 61820   USA.
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