The present cross-sectional study investigated the development of phonological recoding in beginning readers of Dutch, using a proofreading task with pseudohomophones and control misspellings. In Experiment 1, children in grades 1 to 3 rejected fewer pseudohomophones (e.g., wein, sounding like wijn ‘wine’) as spelling errors than control misspellings (e.g., wijg). The size of this pseudohomophone effect was larger in grade 1 than in grade 2 and did not differ between grades 2 and 3. In Experiment 2, we replicated the pseudohomophone effect in beginning readers and we tested how orthographic knowledge may modulate this effect. Children in grades 2 to 4 again detected fewer pseudohomophones than control misspellings and this effect decreased ...
Previous studies reveal that young Dutch children display a [t]-bias in the middle of words in pronu...
Orthographic learning is the topic of many recent studies about reading, but much is still unknown a...
Contains fulltext : 73476.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)The purpose of...
<div><p>The present cross-sectional study investigated the development of phonological recoding in b...
The present cross-sectional study investigated the development of phonological recoding in beginning...
Contains fulltext : 28963.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Three tasks were...
This study addressed the question why vowel spelling acquisition is relatively difficult for young D...
International audienceTwo experiments were carried out to compare the development of phonological re...
The present longitudinal study investigated the growth of word reading fluency in Dutch as a transpa...
Because it is often assumed that difficulties in spelling are of phonological origin, the aim of thi...
Contains fulltext : 175255.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The present lon...
Contains fulltext : 56290.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Lexical-decisi...
Three tasks were employed to investigate the role of assembled phonology in beginning re aders. In t...
The present study investigates English spelling performance of Dutch grammar school students to esta...
In Dutch, vowel duration spelling is phonologically consistent but morphologically inconsistent (e.g...
Previous studies reveal that young Dutch children display a [t]-bias in the middle of words in pronu...
Orthographic learning is the topic of many recent studies about reading, but much is still unknown a...
Contains fulltext : 73476.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)The purpose of...
<div><p>The present cross-sectional study investigated the development of phonological recoding in b...
The present cross-sectional study investigated the development of phonological recoding in beginning...
Contains fulltext : 28963.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Three tasks were...
This study addressed the question why vowel spelling acquisition is relatively difficult for young D...
International audienceTwo experiments were carried out to compare the development of phonological re...
The present longitudinal study investigated the growth of word reading fluency in Dutch as a transpa...
Because it is often assumed that difficulties in spelling are of phonological origin, the aim of thi...
Contains fulltext : 175255.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The present lon...
Contains fulltext : 56290.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Lexical-decisi...
Three tasks were employed to investigate the role of assembled phonology in beginning re aders. In t...
The present study investigates English spelling performance of Dutch grammar school students to esta...
In Dutch, vowel duration spelling is phonologically consistent but morphologically inconsistent (e.g...
Previous studies reveal that young Dutch children display a [t]-bias in the middle of words in pronu...
Orthographic learning is the topic of many recent studies about reading, but much is still unknown a...
Contains fulltext : 73476.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)The purpose of...