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Beyond zebra: Preschoolers' knowledge about letters

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

Rebecca Treiman*
Affiliation:
Wayne State University
Ruth Tincoff
Affiliation:
Johns Hopkins University
E. Daylene Richmond-Welty
Affiliation:
Wayne State University
*
Rebecca Treiman, Wayne State University, Department of Psychology, 71 W. Warren Avenue, Detroit, Michigan 48202. Email: treiman@math.wayne.edu

Abstract

Children in the United States and in other English-speaking countries often learn a good deal about letters before they begin formal reading instruction. We suggest that one important and previously unrecognized type of knowledge about letters is knowledge of the phonological structure of the letters' names. In two experiments, preschoolers with a mean age of 4;8 judged whether various syllables were letters. The children made significantly more false positive responses to syllables such as /fi/, which have a phonological structure shared by a number of letters, than to syllables such as /fa/ and /if/, which sound less like real letters. This was true even for children who could recite the alphabet without error. Learning the alphabet, we conclude, forms the basis for generalizations about the structure of letter names.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1997

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