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Reading and writing as we know it is new: only a few thousand years old ... The earliest printed symbols are found 5,000 year old cuneiform tablets from ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Reading:


1
Reading
  • An introduction

2
Linguistic transparency
  • Someone once noted that we don't speak with
    language, but through it it is transparent to
    us, and we don't even notice it. In our
    experience, our words do not represent concepts
    they present them in a wholly transparent way.
    This is what I mean when I noted that native
    speakers do not normally speak in their language,
    but through it.
  • Bradd Shore
  • Culture In Mind Cognition, Culture, The
    Problem Of Meaning
  • p. 357

3
Linguistic transparency
  • My three-year old daughter doesn't accept
    English words as language, but apparently treats
    them as something like pure word-meaning. She
    asks How you say 'red' in English? She doesnt
    accept red as an answer, but insists on
    something else to be called an English word,
    along with words in other languages. Later in the
    day she asks What is spoon called in English?
  • Dan Slobin
  • A Case Study Of Early Language Awareness
  • In Sinclair, A., Jarvella, R., Levelt W.
    (eds.) The Childs Conception Of Language
  • Pp. 46

4
Making language visible
  • Written words are a way of removing the
    transparency of language, of making language
    visible
  • in learning to read, that transparency is
    removed- it is a system of making language
    conscious.
  • In the end, transparency is put back- in the end
    readers read transparently, directly into meaning

5
A brief history of Western writing
  • Reading and writing as we know it is new only a
    few thousand years old
  • The earliest writing-like symbols of any kind
    (non-iconic marks with meaning) date to 8500 BC
  • These were accounting tokens used in Mesopotamia
  • Most were pictures, some stylized
  • Each token had to be included with shipments in a
    clay vessel

6
A brief history of writing
  • These slowly become more stylized, and eventually
    could be imprinted in 2D
  • The earliest printed symbols are found 5,000 year
    old cuneiform tablets from ancient Mesopotamia,
    also recording transactions, and with no grammar
  • cuneiform wedge-shaped, made by pressing a
    stylus in
  • It was over 1000 years before there is any
    evidence of (ad hoc) attempts to simplify the
    representation, with evidence of a syllabic
    script emerging in 2800 BC
  • This relied on sound-alike signs for example,
    the word for barley (she) could be
    represented in other words by writing the symbol
    for barley
  • Multiple systems were in use at this time

7
A brief history of writing
  • By 1800 BC there were 600 distinct signs in use
  • Some morphology appeared in the guise of symbols
    designed to indicate when a word should be taken
    non-literally
  • Some grammar began to appear, starting with
    slotting one slot for an item, a second for
    its count, separating properties from their
    expression for the first time

8
Phonological representation
  • The invention of the phonetic alphabet was a huge
    simplification, especially on memory load
  • It evolved over several thousand years, and only
    once in all of human history
  • Our A comes from the Greek alpha which came from
    an Old Hebrew syllabary, aleph, which came from a
    North Semitic word meaning oxhead, which itself
    derived from an Egyptian hieroglyph of an oxs
    head, turned sideways
  • The Phoenician alphabet containing 22 consonants
    9no vowels) came to Greece between 1100, and 700
    BC (less than 200 generations ago!)

9
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10
Reading as an invention
  • It is amazing to see how good we are at reading
    considering how artificial it is reading systems
    are an invention, not a natural phenomenon
  • Reading, more than other aspects of language, is
    clearly more psychological than biological

11
English as a case study
  • As ever, we have to be careful of making a
    distinction between studying reading as a
    phenomenon and studying English as a particular
    case of the that phenomenon
  • English is fairly unusual in having a large
    number of irregular sound-to-spelling
    transformations
  • The reason for this is simply historical English
    has evolved to preserve the etymology or source
    of its words we have effectively traded off
    simplicity against history.
  • We pay a price More developmental dyslexia in
    English than Italian

12
What is reading? Not one thing!
  • A lot of the psychological processes involved in
    reading are ones we've already been exposed to
    phonological access, syntax, semantics, grammar
  • Also requires attentional control, associative
    learning, cross-modal transfer (cf. Geschwind),
    pattern-analysis and detection, serial memory
    superb long-term storage access

13
Phonology in reading
  • Word reading bootstraps on phonology in two ways
    learning readers use the phonological database
    they already have (in virtue of being speakers)
    to help them constrain word access, and
    experienced readers are tapping into that
    organization when they read.
  • One of good predictor of reading achievement is a
    pre-literate child's phonological skills their
    ability to consciously extract and recognize
    sounds from the sound stream
  • Children who have good phonological skills are
    able to to, for example, recognize words as
    beginning with the same letter (alliteration) or
    recognize rhyming words- and so they can more
    easily learn to parse the sound stream into
    components.

14
Phonology in reading
  • It has even been possible, by studying children's
    early spelling errors, to get some idea of what
    they are getting from the sound stream
  • For example, nasal consonants (m, n, ng) are more
    likely to be omitted than many other phonemes,
    especially in the middle of a word
  • In acquisition of phonological-to-orthographic
    skills, children show many errors that are
    related to the kinds of things seen
    experimentally in activation studies the onset
    (first consonant) and rime (final two phonemes)
    are easier to learn than other phonemes in a word

15
Phonology in reading
  • Here too there is language-specific variability
    so even adults who are good readers in a
    non-graphemic (logographic) language like Chinese
    may have poor phonological skills
  • In one study that looked at a lot of different
    factors that might contribute to (English)
    reading skill, the single most predictive factor
    they found was one which functioned as a kind of
    short-hand for exposure to sound (and for the
    value placed on reading) it was the number of
    books owned by a parent.

16
Semantics grammar in reading
  • We've also seen that word access is influenced by
    semantic factors and grammatical factors
  • Learning readers can use semantic and grammatical
    plausibility to limit their guesses as to what a
    word might be
  • Again exposure to language and especially to
    written language (read out loud) facilitates the
    use of this source of information.

17
Learning to read
  • The cooption of the visual system (usually) means
    that there is a very different kind of conscious
    learning that goes on for reading which does not
    occur for speaking
  • Children have to made consciously aware of the
    coding system which allows abstract symbols to
    stand for meaningful things.
  • A lot of evidence shows that there is a
    measurable relation between the speed at
    recognizing letters and reading skill, both in
    adult reader and as a predictive measure in early
    learners.

18
Stages in learning to read
  • Learning to read (English) goes through a number
    of stages
  • i.) Pre-literate
  • ii.) Logographic phase
  • iii.) Alphabetic phase
  • iv.) Orthographic phase

19
i.) Pre-literate stage
  • Children in the pre-literate stage
  • Are able to recognize and discriminate letters
    and maybe a few common words
  • Have some phonological skills
  • Understand that letters represent sounds
  • Most North American children enter this stage by
    about age 3.
  • Nico "Look- there's a zoo here!"

20
ii.) Logographic phase
  • Can recognize familiar words, but can hardly read
    or spell any unfamiliar words
  • This is a pseudo-reading stage, in which the
    skills are more related to complex visual
    processing than to decoding linguistic codes
  • Most children are entering this stage prior to
    Grade 1

21
iii.) Alphabetic phase
  • Children in the alphabetic phase have mastered
    the low level functions of reading
  • Feature extraction
  • Letter recognition
  • Word recognition
  • Lexical access
  • They are beginning to use systematic
    grapheme-phoneme correspondence rules for
    converting the (by one estimate) 577 letter-sound
    correspondence rules in English

22
iv.) Orthographic phase
  • The adult stage of reading
  • Sufficient encoding has been done that reading
    can be done by analogy
  • People can fluently read new words (and nonwords)
    by analogy to known words, can read'
    transparently' directly into meaning
  • Dual routes there is strong evidence in aphasia
    studies suggesting that in experienced readers
    there are two routes one for reading whole words
    fast, and another for reading using
    correspondence rules
  • We will have more to say about this phase next
    time when we discuss models

23
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