In this study, dual-process, latent growth models were used to examine patterns of bidirectional relations between letter knowledge and phonological awareness during preschool in a sample of 358 children. Letter-name knowledge and phonological awareness were bidirectionally related, where the initial level of each uniquely predicted growth in the other.
Authors: Mathew D. Lerner & Christopher J. Lonigan
Source: Lerner, M.D. & Lonigan, C.J. (2016). Bidirectional relations between phonological awareness and letter knowledge in preschool revisited: A growth curve analysis of the relation between two code-related skills. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 144, 166–183. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2015.09.023
In this study, dual-process, latent growth models were used to examine patterns of bidirectional relations between letter knowledge and phonological awareness during preschool in a sample of 358 children. Growth models were used to quantify the unique longitudinal relations between the initial level of each skill and growth in the other skill during the preschool year. Letter-name knowledge and phonological awareness were bidirectionally related, where the initial level of each uniquely predicted growth in the other. These findings extend the evidence of the relationship between letter knowledge and phonological awareness to supra-phonemic tasks, indicating that this bidirectional relation begins at an earlier point in the development of phonological awareness than previously reported.
Study
The current study was designed to examine a) the possible bidirectional relation between letter knowledge and earlier emerging facets of phonological awareness, and b) the relationship between vocabulary size and growth in phonological awareness.
Hypotheses:
Participants were 358 preschool children who were approximately 4 years of age at the start of the study.
Findings
Conclusions and implications
The results of this study demonstrated that growth in two important code-related skills—phonological awareness and letter knowledge—was partially dependent on the initial level of the other skill. There were bidirectional predictive relations between the initial status of each skill and growth of the other skill throughout the preschool year. Children with initially more letter-name knowledge experienced more growth in phonological awareness, and children with initially more phonological awareness experienced more growth in letter-name knowledge.