The acquisition of spoken forms and written words: An empirical study of opacity in the speech/reading/writing interface in Danish
Authors: Dorthe Bleses1; Pia Thomsen1
Source: Written Language & Literacy, Volume 7, Number 1, 2004 , pp. 79-99(21)
Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing Company
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Abstract:
The present study examines the complex interactions between the spoken and the written language in twenty Funish childrens oral and written narratives and a read out task. Both quantitative and qualitative analyses were conducted. First, a comparison of the distribution of the reduction phenomena in the childrens language across the two spoken conditions was made. The second analysis looked at the distribution of spelling errors in the written narratives with respect to sound and reduction related errors both at a general and individual level. Finally, a qualitative analysis of three childrens distribution of the large weak class was performed to evaluate a possible interaction between the childrens three registers: spontaneous speech, reading and writing. The results indicated that (a) there was a significant difference in the distribution of forms across the two spoken modalities, e.g. schwa-assimilations and schwa-drop and Funish forms occurred less in the read out condition than in the spoken narratives; (b) spelling errors were predominantly sound related and could be explained as either related to the opaque phoneme to grapheme relation in Danish or to reduction phenomena in the childrens own language; (c) furthermore, there was a significant correlation between spelling errors and a high frequency of reduced forms in the read out condition indicating a close relation between these two modalities.Document Type: Research article
DOI: 10.1075/wll.7.1.08ble
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