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Pollo, Tatiana Cury; Treiman, Rebecca; Kessler, Brett – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2008
Two studies examined children's use of letter-name spelling strategies when target phoneme sequences match letter names with different degrees of precision. We examined Portuguese-speaking preschoolers' use of "h" (which is named /a'ga/ but which never represents those sounds) when spelling words beginning with /ga/ or variants of /ga/. We also…
Descriptors: Language Research, Spelling, Phonemes, Preschool Children
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Pollo, Tatiana Cury; Kessler, Brett; Treiman, Rebecca – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2005
Young Portuguese-speaking children have been reported to produce more vowel- and syllable-oriented spellings than have English speakers. To investigate the extent and source of such differences, we analyzed children's vocabulary and found that Portuguese words have more vowel letter names and a higher vowel-consonant ratio than do English words.…
Descriptors: Vowels, Spelling, Portuguese, Syllables
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Cassar, Marie; Treiman, Rebecca; Moats, Louisa; Pollo, Tatiana Cury; Kessler, Brett – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2005
Children with dyslexia are believed to have very poor phonological skills for which they compensate, to some extent, through relatively well-developed knowledge of letter patterns. We tested this view in Study 1 by comparing 25 dyslexic children and 25 younger normal children, chosen so that both groups performed, on average, at a second-grade…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Spelling, Comparative Analysis, Children