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vol.13 número1Oral language teaching in English as First Additional Language at the Foundation Phase: A case study of changing practiceA linguistic analysis of spelling errors in Grade 3 isiXhosa home-language learners índice de autoresíndice de assuntospesquisa de artigos
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Reading & Writing

versão On-line ISSN 2308-1422
versão impressa ISSN 2079-8245

Resumo

DARIES, Mikaela A.; BOWLES, Tracy N.  e  SCHAEFER, Maxine N.. The contributions of reading and phonological awareness for spelling in grade three isiXhosa learners. Reading & Writing [online]. 2022, vol.13, n.1, pp.1-14. ISSN 2308-1422.  http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/rw.v13i1.365.

BACKGROUND: One factor which is consistently highlighted in research on literacy is the lack of understanding of how literacy develops in the Southern-Bantu languages. In particular, little is known about spelling in the Southern-Bantu languages such as isiXhosa OBJECTIVES: Through the use of an initial exploratory study and a conceptual replication study, we examined the relationships between reading, phonological awareness, and spelling in isiXhosa grade 3 learners. The initial exploratory study sought to describe the relationships between reading and spelling, and phonological awareness and spelling in a sample of 49 grade 3 isiXhosa learners. We then conceptually replicated this study with a larger sample of 200 grade 3 isiXhosa learners. We expected that both reading and phonological awareness would be related to spelling and that the strength of the relationship between reading and spelling, and phonological awareness and spelling would vary with spelling ability, due to the changes that occur in the development of spelling METHOD: Cross-sectional, quantitative secondary data were used from two different projects to answer the research questions. Tasks of phonological awareness, oral reading fluency and spelling were developed and administered to the participants RESULTS: We found that reading was a replicable predictor of spelling for grade 3 isiXhosa learners and that phonological awareness was influential only at the mid-range of spelling performance CONCLUSION: Our findings emphasise the importance of the reading - writing connection, and lend support for what has been found for other consistently written languages, adding to the growing body of knowledge of universal predictors of spelling development

Palavras-chave : spelling; phonological awareness; oral reading fluency; literacy; isiXhosa; conceptual replication.

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