Development and relationships between phonological awareness, morphological awareness and word reading in spoken and standard Arabic

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This study addressed the development of and the relationship between foundational metalinguistic skills and word reading skills in Arabic. It compared Arabic-speaking children's phonological awareness (PA), morphological awareness, and voweled and unvoweled word reading skills in spoken and standard language varieties separately in children across five grade levels from childhood to adolescence. Second, it investigated whether skills developed in the spoken variety of Arabic predict reading in the standard variety. Results indicate that although individual differences between students in PA are eliminated toward the end of elementary school in both spoken and standard language varieties, gaps in morphological awareness and in reading skills persisted through junior and high school years. The results also show that the gap in reading accuracy and fluency between Spoken Arabic (SpA) and Standard Arabic (StA) was evident in both voweled and unvoweled words. Finally, regression analyses showed that morphological awareness in SpA contributed to reading fluency in StA, i.e., children's early morphological awareness in SpA explained variance in children's gains in reading fluency in StA. These findings have important theoretical and practical contributions for Arabic reading theory in general and they extend the previous work regarding the cross-linguistic relevance of foundational metalinguistic skills in the first acquired language to reading in a second language, as in societal bilingualism contexts, or a second language variety, as in diglossic contexts.

Original languageEnglish
Article number356
JournalFrontiers in Psychology
Volume9
Issue numberAPR
DOIs
StatePublished - 9 Apr 2018

Keywords

  • Arabic
  • Diglossia
  • Linguistic distance
  • Morphological awareness
  • Phonological awareness
  • Word reading accuracy
  • Word reading fluency

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • General Psychology

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