ABSTRACT

With contributions from leading international researchers, Contemporary Perspectives on Reading and Spelling offers a critique of current thinking on the research literature into reading, reading comprehension and writing. Each paper in this volume provides an account of empirical research that challenges aspects of accepted models and widely accepted theories about reading and spelling.

This book develops the argument for a need to incorporate less widely cited research into popular accounts of written language development and disability, challenging the idea that the development of a universal theory of written language development is attainable. The arguments within the book are explored in three parts:

  • overarching debates in reading and spelling
  • reading and spelling across languages
  • written language difficulties and approaches to teaching.

Opening up the existing debates, and incorporating psychological theory and the politics surrounding the teaching and learning of reading and spelling, this edited collection offers some challenging points for reflection about how the discipline of psychology as a whole approaches the study of written language skills.

Highlighting ground-breaking new perspectives, this book forms essential reading for all researchers and practitioners with a focus on the development of reading and spelling skills.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction: Contemporary perspectives on reading and spelling

ByCLARE WOOD, VINCENT CONNELLY

part |2 pages

Part 1 Overarching debates in reading and spelling

chapter 1|17 pages

Phonological awareness: beyond phonemes

ByCLARE WOOD, LESLY WADE-WOOLLEY AND ANDREW J. HOLLIMAN

chapter 5|16 pages

The acquisition of spelling patterns: early, late or never?

ByNENAGH KEMP

chapter 6|17 pages

Viewing spelling in a cognitive context: underlying representations and processes

BySARAH CRITTEN, KAREN J. PINE

chapter 7|22 pages

What spelling errors have to tell about vocabulary learning

ByRUTH H. BAHR, ELAINE R. SILLIMAN, VIRGINIA BERNINGER

part |2 pages

Part 2 Reading and spelling across languages

part |2 pages

PART 3 Written language difficulties and approaches to teaching

chapter 14|15 pages

Does the type of reading instruction have an influence on how readers process print?

ByVINCENT CONNELLY, G. BRIAN THOMPSON, CLAIRE M. FLETCHER-FLINN AND