An experimental comparison of additional training in phoneme awareness, letter-sound knowledge and decoding for struggling beginner readers

Charlotte Webber, Hetal Patel, Anna J. Cunningham, Amy Fox, Janet Vousden, Anne Castles, Laura Shapiro*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background
Despite evidence that synthetic phonics teaching has increased reading attainments, a sizable minority of children struggle to acquire phonics skills and teachers lack clear principles for deciding what types of additional support are most beneficial. Synthetic phonics teaches children to read using a decoding strategy to translate letters into sounds and blend them (e.g., c-a-t = “k - æ – t” = “cat”). To use a decoding strategy, children require letter-sound knowledge (LSK) and the ability to blend sound units (phonological awareness; PA). Training on PA has been shown to benefit struggling beginning readers. However, teachers in English primary schools do not routinely check PA. Instead, struggling beginner readers usually receive additional LSK support.

Aims
Until now, there has been no systematic comparison of the effectiveness of training on each component of the decoding process. Should additional support for struggling readers focus on improving PA, or on supplementary LSK and/or decoding instruction? We aim to increase understanding of the roles of LSK and PA in children's acquisition of phonics skills and uncover which types of additional training are most likely to be effective for struggling beginner readers.

Sample and Method
We will compare training on each of these components, using a carefully controlled experimental design. We will identify reception-age children at risk of reading difficulties (target n = 225) and randomly allocate them to either PA, LSK or decoding (DEC) training. We will test whether training type influences post-test performance on word reading and whether any effects depend on participants' pre-test PA and/or LSK.

Results and Conclusions
Two hundred and twenty-two participants completed the training. Planned analyses showed no effects of condition on word reading. However, exploratory analyses indicated that the advantage of trained over untrained words was significantly greater for the PA and DEC conditions. There was also a significantly greater improvement in PA for the DEC condition. Overall, our findings suggest a potential advantage of training that includes blending skills, particularly when decoding words that had been included in training. Future research is needed to develop a programme of training on blending skills combined with direct vocabulary instruction for struggling beginner readers.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere12641
JournalBritish Journal of Educational Psychology
Early online date20 Nov 2023
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 20 Nov 2023

Bibliographical note

© 2023 The Authors. British Journal of Educational Psychology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Psychological Society.

This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Funding: British Academy/ Leverhulme. Grant Number: SRG\170066; Aston University Research Impact Fund. Grant Number: IFOC1-2021/2-004

Keywords

  • awareness
  • decoding
  • early reading
  • graphemephoneme-correspondences
  • letter-sound knowledge
  • phoneme awareness
  • phonics
  • phonological
  • reading difficulties
  • synthetic phonics

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