What's Meaning Got to Do With It: The Role of Vocabulary in Word Reading and Reading Comprehension

There is at present no clear consensus as to the nature of the relations between oral vocabulary and specific literacy skills. The present study distinguished between vocabulary breadth and depth of vocabulary knowledge to better explain the role of oral vocabulary in various reading skills. A sample of 60 typically developing Grade 4 students was assessed on measures of receptive and expressive vocabulary breadth, depth of vocabulary knowledge, decoding, visual word recognition, and reading comprehension. Concurrent analyses revealed that each distinct reading skill was related to the vocabulary measures in a unique manner. Receptive vocabulary breadth was the only oral vocabulary variable that predicted decoding performance after controlling for age and nonverbal intelligence. In contrast, expressive vocabulary breadth predicted visual word recognition, whereas depth of vocabulary knowledge predicted reading comprehension. The results are discussed in terms of interrelations between phonological and semantic factors in the acquisition of distinct reading skills.

[1]  Linda Brown,et al.  Test of Nonverbal Intelligence , 2003 .

[2]  U. Goswami,et al.  Phonological awareness deficits in developmental dyslexia and the phonological representations hypothesis. , 1997, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[3]  Pathways to reading: the role of oral language in the transition to reading. , 2005, Developmental psychology.

[4]  J. Tomblin,et al.  Language Basis of Reading and Reading Disabilities: Evidence From a Longitudinal Investigation , 1999 .

[5]  M Coltheart,et al.  DRC: a dual route cascaded model of visual word recognition and reading aloud. , 2001, Psychological review.

[6]  G. Whitehurst,et al.  Oral language and code-related precursors to reading: evidence from a longitudinal structural model. , 2002, Developmental psychology.

[7]  Michael H. Kutner Applied Linear Statistical Models , 1974 .

[8]  Holly L Storkel,et al.  The Lexicon and Phonology: Interactions in Language Acquisition. , 2002, Language, speech, and hearing services in schools.

[9]  Virginia W. Berninger,et al.  Language Phenotype for Reading and Writing Disability: A Family Approach , 2001 .

[10]  Susan E. Stothard,et al.  A comparison of phonological skills in children with reading comprehension difficulties and children with decoding difficulties. , 1995, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[11]  Amanda C. Walley,et al.  Spoken vocabulary growth: Its role in the development of phoneme awareness and early reading ability , 2003 .

[12]  Philip B. Gough,et al.  Decoding, Reading, and Reading Disability , 1986 .

[13]  J. Elashoff,et al.  Multiple Regression in Behavioral Research. , 1975 .

[14]  Linnea C. Ehri,et al.  Learning to Read Words: Theory, Findings, and Issues , 2005 .

[15]  G. Whitehurst,et al.  Child development and emergent literacy. , 1998, Child development.

[16]  D. Share,et al.  Language Impairment at School Entry and Later Reading Disability: Connections at Lexical Versus Supralexical Levels of Reading , 2004 .

[17]  H. Lee Swanson,et al.  Reading Comprehension Skills of Young Adults with Childhood Diagnoses of Dyslexia , 2003, Journal of learning disabilities.

[18]  L. Ehri Sight word learning in normal readers and dyslexics. , 1997 .

[19]  Hugh W. Catts,et al.  The Connections between Language and Reading Disabilities , 2005 .

[20]  J. Lloyd Eldredge,et al.  Causal Relationships Between Phonics, Reading Comprehension, and Vocabulary Achievement in the Second Grade , 1990 .

[21]  Marilyn Jager Adams,et al.  The Growth of Children's Sight Vocabulary: A Quick Test with Educational and Theoretical Implications. Technical Report No. 330. , 1985 .

[22]  Elfrieda H. Hiebert,et al.  Teaching and learning vocabulary : bringing research to practice , 2005 .

[23]  K. Cain,et al.  The dissociation of word reading and text comprehension: Evidence from component skills , 2003 .

[24]  Rochelle S Newman,et al.  Effects of Lexical Factors on Lexical Access among Typical Language-Learning Children and Children with Word-Finding Difficulties , 2002, Language and speech.

[25]  Charles Hulme,et al.  Phonemes, rimes and language skills as foundations of early reading development: Evidence from a longitudinal study. , 2004 .

[26]  E. Funnell,et al.  Response Biases in Oral Reading: An Account of the Co occurrence of Surface Dyslexia and Semantic Dementia , 1996, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.

[27]  Margaret J. Snowling,et al.  Semantic processing and the development of word-recognition skills: Evidence from children with reading comprehension difficulties. , 1998 .

[28]  John Coleman,et al.  Cognitive reality and the phonological lexicon: A review , 1998, Journal of Neurolinguistics.

[29]  James L. McClelland,et al.  A distributed, developmental model of word recognition and naming. , 1989, Psychological review.

[30]  Margaret Lahey,et al.  Language disorders and language development , 1988 .

[31]  Kim A. Lindsey,et al.  Decoding and sight-word naming: Are they independent components of word recognition skill? , 1999 .

[32]  A. Biemiller,et al.  Size and Sequence in Vocabulary Development: Implications for Choosing Words for Primary Grade Vocabulary Instruction. , 2005 .

[33]  Bente Eriksen Hagtvet,et al.  Listening comprehension and reading comprehension in poor decoders: Evidence for the importance of syntactic and semantic skills as well as phonological skills , 2003 .

[34]  Peter Freebody,et al.  Word-Reading Strategies in Elementary School Children: Relations to Comprehension, Reading Time, and Phonemic Awareness. , 1988 .

[35]  R. Wagner,et al.  The nature of phonological processing and its causal role in the acquisition of reading skills. , 1987 .

[36]  Gene P. Ouellette,et al.  Testing the concurrent and predictive relations among articulation accuracy, speech perception, and phoneme awareness. , 2004, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[37]  U. Goswami Blackwell handbook of childhood cognitive development , 2002 .

[38]  David K. Dickinson,et al.  The Comprehensive Language Approach to Early Literacy: The Interrelationships Among Vocabulary, Phonological Sensitivity, and Print Knowledge Among Preschool-Aged Children , 2003 .

[39]  Willem J. M. Levelt,et al.  A theory of lexical access in speech production , 1999, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[40]  Max Coltheart,et al.  Modeling Reading: The Dual‐Route Approach , 2008 .

[41]  Jeanne Sternlicht Chall,et al.  The reading crisis : why poor children fall behind , 1992 .

[42]  Jack M. Fletcher,et al.  Comprehension and Decoding: Patterns of Association in Children With Reading Difficulties , 1999 .

[43]  J. B. Wyman,et al.  What is reading ability , 1921 .

[44]  Froma P. Roth,et al.  A Longitudinal Analysis of the Connection Between Oral Language and Early Reading , 2002 .

[45]  C. Hulme,et al.  The Role of Phonology in Young Children Learning to Read Words: The Direct-Mapping Hypothesis. , 1994 .

[46]  D. Share Phonological recoding and self-teaching: sine qua non of reading acquisition , 1995, Cognition.

[47]  Charles Hulme,et al.  The science of reading: A handbook. , 2005 .

[48]  Sven Joubert,et al.  Neural correlates of lexical and sublexical processes in reading , 2004, Brain and Language.

[49]  J. Hodges,et al.  The relationship between comprehension and oral reading in progressive fluent aphasia , 1994, Neuropsychologia.

[50]  Walter Kintsch,et al.  Comprehension: A Paradigm for Cognition , 1998 .

[51]  Catherine E. Snow,et al.  SHELL: Oral Language and Early Literacy Skills in Kindergarten and First-Grade Children , 1995 .

[52]  James L. McClelland,et al.  Understanding normal and impaired word reading: computational principles in quasi-regular domains. , 1996, Psychological review.

[53]  Mark S. Seidenberg,et al.  Phonology, reading acquisition, and dyslexia: insights from connectionist models. , 1999, Psychological review.

[54]  J. LeFevre,et al.  Parental involvement in the development of children's reading skill: a five-year longitudinal study. , 2002, Child development.

[55]  Jamie L. Metsala,et al.  Young children's phonological awareness and nonword repetition as a function of vocabulary development. , 1999 .

[56]  Stephen R. Burgess,et al.  Development of emergent literacy and early reading skills in preschool children: evidence from a latent-variable longitudinal study. , 2000, Developmental psychology.

[57]  Xiao-Li Meng,et al.  Comparing correlated correlation coefficients , 1992 .

[58]  Charles Hulme,et al.  A comparison of reading comprehenison and decoding difficulties in children. , 1996 .

[59]  V. Barnett,et al.  Applied Linear Statistical Models , 1975 .

[60]  M. Snowling Literacy outcomes for children with oral language impairments: Developmental interactions between language skills and learning to read , 2005 .

[61]  Mark S. Seidenberg,et al.  Computing the meanings of words in reading: cooperative division of labor between visual and phonological processes. , 2004, Psychological review.

[62]  K. Nation Connections between language and reading in children with poor reading comprehension , 2005 .

[63]  K. Nation,et al.  Developmental differences in sensitivity to semantic relations among good and poor comprehenders: evidence from semantic priming , 1999, Cognition.

[64]  Karalyn Patterson Deterioration of word meaning: implications for reading , 1995 .

[65]  F. Vellutino,et al.  Semantic and phonological coding in poor and normal readers. , 1995, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[66]  Elfrieda H. Hiebert,et al.  Size and Sequence in Vocabulary Development: Implications for Choosing Words for Primary Grade Vocabulary Instruction , 2005 .

[67]  D. Compton The Relationships Among Phonological Processing, Orthographic Processing, and Lexical Development in Children with Reading Disabilities , 2002 .

[68]  Margaret J. Snowling,et al.  Beyond phonological skills: broader language skills contribute to the development of reading , 2004 .

[69]  R Treiman,et al.  Individual differences among children in spelling and reading styles. , 1984, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[70]  Jane Oakhill,et al.  Reading Comprehension Difficulties , 2004 .

[71]  David K. Dickinson,et al.  Handbook of early literacy research , 2001 .

[72]  Peter Bryant,et al.  Phonological skills and comprehension failure: A test of the phonological processing deficit hypothesis , 2000 .

[73]  Lynn S. Fuchs,et al.  The Journal Of Special Education , 1993 .

[74]  C. Hulme,et al.  Phonological and semantic processes influence beginning readers' ability to learn to read words. , 1999, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[75]  Mark S. Seidenberg,et al.  PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST HOW PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE INFORMS THE TEACHING OF READING , 2022 .

[76]  Margaret J. Snowling,et al.  Phonological and semantic contributions to children's picture naming skill: Evidence from children with developmental reading disorders , 2001 .

[77]  H. Catts,et al.  Developmental Relationships Between Language and Reading: Reconciling a Beautiful Hypothesis With Some Ugly Facts , 2005 .

[78]  L. Ehri,et al.  Are word-reading processes the same or different in adult literacy students and third–fifth graders matched for reading level? , 1997 .