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A longitudinal study of reading development in dyslexic children.
101
Citations
31
References
1996
Year
Child LiteracyDyslexic ChildrenReading FailureLanguage DevelopmentCognitive DevelopmentLanguage AcquisitionReading DifficultiesReadingSpecial EducationLiteracy DevelopmentRehabilitationDyslexia CompromiseEducationLanguage StudiesReading DisabilitiesLinguisticsSpecific Learning DisorderLiteracy Skills
The development of literacy skills was studied in 20 dyslexic children (7 years 7 months to 12 years 7 months). At Time I, the dyslexic children performed worse on tests of reading, spelling, and phonological processing than chronological age-matched normal readers, but their performance was qualitatively similar to that of younger reading age-matched controls. The dyslexic children made poor progress over the following 2 years and, in comparison with reading age controls at Time 2, showed specific difficulties in nonword reading and repetition and made more dysphonetic spelling errors. The authors argue that this typical dyslexic profile becomes more defined with development and provides support for the theory that phonological deficits in dyslexia compromise the development of reading skills.
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