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Component Skills of Reading and Their Structural Relations: Evidence from Three Sub-Saharan African Languages with Transparent Orthographies
Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
- Kim, Young-Suk Grace (Author)
- Piper, Benjamin (Author)
Title
Component Skills of Reading and Their Structural Relations: Evidence from Three Sub-Saharan African Languages with Transparent Orthographies
Abstract
Background: We examined the component skills of reading comprehension (i.e., letter sound knowledge, syllable reading fluency, decoding fluency, text or oral reading fluency and listening comprehension) and their structural relations using data from three sub-Saharan African languages with transparent orthographies in a multilingual context. Methods: Data from Kiswahili (N = 946), Kikamba (N = 444) and Lubukusu (N = 499) reading assessments at the end of Grade 2 in Kenya were analysed using path analyses. Results: The magnitudes of the relations were similar across the three languages with some differences amongst the languages. Total effects (regression weights), accounting for direct "and" indirect effects, varied across the component skills: text reading fluency (0.73 to 0.77), decoding fluency (0.49 to 0.82), letter sound knowledge (0.44 to 0.45), syllable reading fluency (-0.12 to 0.16) and listening comprehension (0.08 to 0.23). Conclusions: The results indicate similar reading mechanisms across the three sub-Saharan languages.
Publication
Component Skills of Reading and Their Structural Relations: Evidence from Three Sub-Saharan African Languages with Transparent Orthographies
Volume
42
Issue
2
Pages
326-348
Date
2019-05-01
Language
eng
ISSN
0141-0423
Extra
an: EJ1213011; source: Journal of Research in Reading; docTypes: Journal Articles ; Reports - Research; pubTypes: Academic JournalReport;
Citation
Kim, Y.-S. G., & Piper, B. (2019). Component Skills of Reading and Their Structural Relations: Evidence from Three Sub-Saharan African Languages with Transparent Orthographies. Component Skills of Reading and Their Structural Relations: Evidence from Three Sub-Saharan African Languages with Transparent Orthographies, 42(2), 326–348. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9817.12271
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