Phonemic Awareness Research
Phonemic Awareness Research
By: ChildrenLearningReading.com
Phonemic
Awareness is the ability to hear, identify, and manipulate the individual
sounds which make up words. In the past few decades, large amounts of research
have improved our understanding of phonemic awareness and its importance in
helping children learn to read. There are hundreds of research studies
conducted on all aspects of phonemic awareness, and how it affects and benefits
reading and spelling abilities of young children. The National Reading Panel of
the US have stated that phonemic awareness improves children's reading and
reading comprehension, and that it also helps children to learn to spell. Based
on the research and reviews done by the National Reading Panel, they have
concluded that teaching phonics and phonemic awareness produces better reading
results than whole language programs.
When
teaching phonemic awareness, children are taught the smallest units of sound,
or phonemes. During the teaching process, children are taught to focus on the
phonemes, and learn to manipulate the phonemes in words. Studies have
identified phonemic awareness and letter knowledge as the two best school-entry
predictors of how well children will learn to read during the first 2 years of
instruction. In a review of phonemic awareness research, the National Reading
Panel (NRP) identified 1,962 citations, and the results of their meta-analysis
were impressive as stated in the NRP publication:
Overall, the findings showed that teaching
children to manipulate phonemes in words was highly effective under a variety
of teaching conditions with a variety of learners across a range of grade and
age levels and that teaching phonemic awareness to children significantly
improves their reading more than instruction that lacks any attention to
phonemic awareness (PA).
Specifically, the results of the experimental
studies led the Panel to conclude that PA training was the cause of improvement
in students’ phonemic awareness, reading, and spelling following training. The
findings were replicated repeatedly across multiple experiments and thus
provide converging evidence for causal claims. [1]
As
can be clearly seen, teaching children phonemic awareness early on
significantly improves their reading and spelling abilities. Furthermore, the
NRP research stated that these beneficial effects of phonemic awareness
teaching goes well beyond the end of training period. The NRP phonemic
awareness research also found that the most effective teaching method was to
systematically teach children to manipulate phonemes with letters, and teaching
children in small groups.
Phonemic awareness (PA) teaching provides children with an essential foundation of the alphabet system, and a foundation in reading and spelling. The NRP has stated that PA instructions is a necessary instructional component within a complete reading program.
Below
are two other studies done on phonemic awareness, and its effects on reading
abilities. In a study involving children aged 6 to 7 years old, researchers
found that the few readers at the beginning of grade one exhibited high
phonemic awareness scored at least close to perfect in the vowel substitution
task, compared to none in children of the same age group who could not read
when they entered school. The research also stated that phonemic awareness
differences before instruction predicted the accuracy of alphabetic reading and
spelling at the end of grade one independent from IQ. Children with high
phonemic awareness at the start of grade one had high reading and spelling
achievements at the end of grade one; however, some of the children with low
phonemic awareness had difficulties learning to read and spell. The study
suggested that phonemic awareness is the critical variable for the progress in
learning to read. [2]
Another study looked at phonemic awareness and emergent literacy skills of 42 children with an average age of 5 years and 7 months. The researchers indicated that relations between phonemic awareness and spelling skills are bidirectional where phonemic awareness improved spelling skills, and spelling influenced the growth in phonemic skills. [3]
It
is clear that with the conclusions made by the National Reading Panel and other
research studies on the benefits of phonemic awareness, children should be
taught PA at a young age before entering school. This helps them build a strong
foundation for learning to read and spell.
>> Help your child develop phonemic awareness and
teach your child to read today
Notes:
1. National Institute of Child Health
and Human Development. (2000). Report of the National Reading Panel.
Teaching children to read: An evidence-based assessment of the scientific
research literature on reading and its implications for reading instruction (NIH
Publication No. 00-4769). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.
2. Cognition. 1991 Sep;40(3):219-49.
The relationship of phonemic awareness to reading acquisition: more consequence
than precondition but still important.
Wimmer H, Landerl K, Linortner R, Hummer P.
University of Salzburg, Austria.
3. Exp Child Psychol. 2002
Jun;82(2):93-115.
Emergent literacy skills and training time uniquely predict variability in
responses to phonemic awareness training in disadvantaged kindergartners.
Hecht SA, Close L.
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