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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
Treiman, Rebecca; And Others – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1983
Reports on three experiments focusing on phonological recoding in fluent reading of meaningful sentences and asks whether spelling-sound rules play a role in this process. Results show that effects attributed to spelling-sound rule use--effects previously found in lexical decision tasks with single words--also emerge in sentence reading. (EKN)
Descriptors: Language Research, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence, Reading, Reading Processes
Treiman, Rebecca – 1982
Stop consonants after initial /s/ are standardly spelled as the unvoiced stops /p/, /t/, and /k/. Phonetically, however, they are similar to the voiced stops /b/, /d/, and /g/. Research suggests that many young children make consistent, reasonable, but unconventional, judgments about sounds and English spelling. This paper considers the case of…
Descriptors: Adults, Consonants, Language Research, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence

Treiman, Rebecca; Broderick, Victor; Tincoff, Ruth; Rodriguez, Kira – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1998
Three studies examined linguistic factors influencing preschooler's phonemic awareness task performance. Results indicated no performance differences between fricatives and stops. Subjects were more likely to mistakenly judge that syllables began with a target phoneme when the initial phoneme differed from the target only in voicing than when it…
Descriptors: Consonants, Language Research, Performance Factors, Phonemes

Treiman, Rebecca; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1993
Two experiments explored the effects of one aspect of English phonology, syllabic consonants, on young children's spelling. For first graders, vowel omissions and misorderings occurred primarily for syllabic /r/ and /l/, whereas by second grade only orthographically influenced errors on syllabic /l/ remained. Results show that the sound form of…
Descriptors: Consonants, Elementary School Students, Kindergarten Children, Language Research
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
Treiman, Rebecca – 1987
While previous studies have investigated children's awareness of two units within words--syllables and phonemes, there is experimental evidence that children are also aware of intrasyllabic units (units intermediate in size between the syllable and the phoneme), and that these units may be useful for teaching phonological awareness and reading.…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Decoding (Reading), Language Acquisition, Language Research