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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Our aim was to analyse the impact of the characteristics of occlusive versus
fricative phonemes used in writing programmes on the evolution of pre-school
children’s writing.
The participants were 39 5-year-old grapho-perceptive children. Their intelligence,
number of letters known and phonological skills were controlled. Their writing was
evaluated in a pre and a post-test using words beginning with fricatives and occlusives.
In-between ExpG.1 trained the associations between letters and occlusive phonemes and
ExpG.2 between letters and fricative phonemes. The control group classified geometric
shapes. Both experimental groups achieved better results than the control group. There
were no differences between the experimental groups concerning the use of F, V, Z and
P but Exp.G.1 achieved better results for B and D. The programme which lead children
to think about the relationships between speech and writing under linguistically more
complex conditions – i.e. which involve the mobilisation of occlusive phonemes – seem
to be more effective in terms of the generalisation of phonetisation procedures, than the
programme which mobilise phonemes that are easier to isolate within the acoustic flow,
such as fricative phonemes.
Description
Keywords
Articulatory properties of phonemes Preschool children Writing programmes
Citation
Applied Psycholinguistics, 31, 693-709