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THE MIND LEARNING TO READ Roelien Herholdt & Prof. Elbie Henning 2015

How mind learn to read

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Page 1: How mind learn to read

THE MIND LEARNING TO READ

Roelien Herholdt & Prof. Elbie Henning

2015

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CONTENTS

v  A baseline

v  A neuroscience perspective

v  Contextualisation

v  Preparation for later learning to read v  Speech circuits v Visual circuits

v  Learning to read

v  Implications for education

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

This presentation draws widely on the works of:

v  Prof Stanislas Dehaene – Reading in the brain

v Dr Jenny Thomson – University of London

v Dr Duncan Milne –Teaching the brain to read

v  Prof Leonard White and Prof Dale Purvis – Duke University

v All other sources can be found under references

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SOME QUESTIONS

True or false

v  The foundations for reading are laid when children start with grade R or

in some cases the last years of nursery school

v  Areas facilitating reading is only found in the left hemisphere of the

brain

v Whole language approaches or balanced language approaches are the

optimal way to teach reading

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WHY NEUROSCIENCE?

v  Understanding a system, in this case the brain, can assist in

understanding how to this system works

v  Empowering teachers and people working with children with an

understanding of the neuroscience of reading can lead to better

ways of assisting children

v  An understanding of the underlying science can assist in the

development and testing of teaching methodologies and materials

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CONTEXTUALISATION

Literacy, including reading, must be understood within the South African

context

South Africa is a multilingual country

o  Bi-/multilingualism is the norm rather than the exception o  Languages differ in terms of their regularity – how well sounds/

phonemes map onto letters o  Which languages you put together is important

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TYPES OF LANGUAGES

v  Logographic languages

v  Transparent languages

o  Letter-sound (grapheme-phoneme) connections are regular o  Phonological awareness – predictor of reading achievement o  Phoneme most important component

v  Less transparent languages

o  Lots of irregularities or exceptions o  Onset and rime patterns become more important

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LEARNING TO READ

Children start on the path to becoming readers in the first year of life

o  Visual development – invariant visual recognition o  Linguistic development – speech comprehension

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PREPARATION FOR READING

Prenatally and first six months after birth

v Rhythm of native language in utero v Linguistic contrasts e.g. /ba/ /ga/ v Left superior temporal region – analysis of speech sounds v Temporal lobe – extracting phonemes, words and sentences v Left inferior prefrontal region - Broca’s area – previously

thought to only involve speech production and grammatical skills, activated in babies listening to speech

v Predisposition for acquiring a language v Prosody – myth of left hemisphere dominance

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PREPARATION FOR READING

First three years –tuning to native language

v six months – vowels of native language v one year – consonants of native language

o  Japanese babies /r/ /l/ and in South Africa? o  Discards speech combinations not in native language o  Speech segments occurring most often become first

words v two to three years

o  vocabulary increases by 10 – 20 words per day o  Basic grammatical rules of language

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READY TO READ

v  Age five to six

v Vocabulary of several 1000 words in native language

v Basic grammatical rules of language

v Visual system developed invariant recognition

o  Maximal plasticity or a sensitive period

v  Sophisticated speech circuits, which will assist in making sense of the

written word

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VISUAL CIRCUITS

v  Simultaneously to the speech circuits the visual circuits develop

v  Infants learns to

o  parse visual scenes into objects and to track them, even when they are concealed for a period of time

o  recognise faces – by 9 months they specialise in recognition of human faces

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VISUAL CIRCUITS

v One year olds

o  can discriminate between objects using contours, texture, and whether they are convex or concave

o  when viewing an object from several view points they can infer its three dimensional shape, using the type of edge junctions (T, Y or L)

v  Two year olds can break an object down into its parts or elements

v  Five to six year olds have developed invariant visual recognition

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STAGES IN READING

Logographic or pictorial stage

v  Recognises words as objects

v Uses color, shape, letter orientation and curvature

v Exploits superficial cues

v Very artificial form of reading

v  The right occipito-temporal region distinguishes consonant strings

from words – bilateral processing

v  Stage brief in transparent languages

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PHONOLOGICAL STAGE

v Grapheme-phoneme links as well as link between spoken and written language

v  Phonemic awareness – spoken words consist of phonemes

v Explicit teaching – alphabetic principle: phonemes map onto graphemes

v Word length and grapheme complexity increase reading time

v  Illiterates can discriminate sounds, detect rhyme, etc. but struggle with

substitution •  Mastery of alphabetic principle changes brain wiring •  Visual system breaks words into graphemes •  Parts of speech systems adapt to explicit representation of phonemes

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PHONEMES OR GRAPHEMES FIRST?

v  Spiral causality o  Grapheme awareness focus attention on phonemes o  Phonemic awareness enhances grapheme awareness

v  Phonological stage is characterised by o  regularisation mistakes of irregular words such as “said” will be

read as “sa-it”, “key” will be read as “kay” o  Diffculty reading words with complex consonant structures, e.g.

CCCVCC such as in “strict”

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ORTHOGRAPHIC STAGE

v  Reading time no longer determined by word length or grapheme complexity

v Higher frequency words read faster than rare words

v Reading becomes more fluent

v  Parallelism as opposed to serial processing

•  Up to 8 letters at a time •  Still processes every letter though

v  Efficiency increases

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THE LETTERBOX

v Also called the visual word form area

v  Located in the left lateral occipito-temporal sulcus (valley), next to

the fusiform gyrus (hill)

v  This area is activated, irrespective of the language which is read,

the reading direction (left to right or right to left) or the type of

language

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TWO READING PATHWAYS

Phonological decoding route

v  Depends on phoneme-grapheme correspondence

v  Generative – “self-teaching effect”

v  Steps:

o  Segmentation o  Transcoding – link grapheme to phoneme o  Fusion or concatenation

v  Assess through pseudo-words, e.g. labbit

o  Lexicalisation, e.g. labbit is read as rabbit o  Additions, omissions, inversions and substitution

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TWO READING PATHWAYS Direct access or lexical route

v  After lots of repetition o  Develops only after years of practice o  Creates illusion of whole word reading though fast and efficient automatisation

of processes

v  Depends on establishment of a direct connection between visual and auditory systems

v  Leads to less mistakes and is faster

v  Used most often by fluent readers o  Left hemispheric dominance for processing in reading occurs o  Prosody still processed in right hemisphere

v  Assess using irregular words, e.g. said o  Mistake = regularisation e.g. sa-it

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HOW THIS LOOKS IN THE BRAIN?

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SOME UNDISPUTED FACTS v  Reading changes the brain

o  Cortical areas for face, object and colour recognition become attuned to graphemes and written word

v  Reading improves reading o  Left inferior prefrontal cortex

v  Poor readers’ reading achievement gets progressively worse without

intervention

v  Reading must be taught explicitly o  Children do not acquire reading spontaneously o  Learning takes time to master – in more opaque languages learning to read takes

longer

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MIRROR READING/WRITING

o  Called boustrophedon

o  Natural process where visual invariance is applied to graphemes and words

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DYSLEXIA

v Neurologically based – phonological pathway

v Often hereditary

v Leads to problems with reading, writing and spelling

v Associated with difficulties in o  Concentration o  Short term memory o  Organisation

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HELPFUL STRATEGIES

v Explicit teaching of phonemic awareness

v Explicit teaching of alphabetical principle

v  Phonics programme must be structured and sequential, e.g. teach regular

frequently used phonemes first

v  Simultaneous teaching of graphemes and phonemes

v Multisensory – feel pronunciation, use concrete letters, hear & say

v Metacognitive, e.g. LCWC for irregular words

v Reduce memory and attention load

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BRUCE MCCANDLISS

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BRUCE MCCANDLISS

v  Phonics vs whole language experiment

v WL did better on first 30 words learned, but on learning the second 30

words they started forgetting the first words

v  Phonics group took longer to master the grapheme-phoneme combinations,

but:

o  Improved steadily o  Did better on encountering new words o  Remembered previously learned words better, even with no revision

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TEACHING

v  Should we aim to increase verbal vocabulary?

v  Should we teach letter sounds, letter names or both?

v  Should our teaching of letter formation be linked to our teaching of

phonemes, spelling and reading?

v  Should we teach graphemes or phonemes first?

v Whole language, phonics approach or balanced language approach?

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REFERENCES

v  Bhatt, R.S., Hayden, A., Bertin, E. & Joseph, J. (2006). Infants’ perception of

information along object bounderies: Concavities versus convexities. Journal of

Experimental Child Psychology, 94(2), 91-113.

v  Chomsky, N. (1980). Rules and representations. Oxford: Basil Blackwell

v  De Haan, M., Johnson, M.H. & Halit, H. (2003). Development of face sensitive event

related potentials during infancy: a review. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 51(1),

45-58.

v  Frith, U. (1985). Beneath the surface of developmental dyslexia. In Patterson, K. E.,

Marshall, J. C. & Colheart, M. (Eds.), Surface dyslexia: Cognitive and

neuropsychological studies of phonological reading. Hilldale: Erlbuam. Pp 301-330

REFERENCES

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REFERENCES

v  Gathers, A.D., Bhatt, R., Corbly, C.R., Farley, A.B. &Joseph, J.E. (2004). Developmental shifts

in cortical loci for face and object recognition. NeuroReport, 15(10), 1549-1553.

v  Kellman.P. J., & Spelke, E.S. (1983). Perception of partly occluded objects in infancy. Cognitive

Psychology, 15, 483 – 524

v  Kraebel, K.S. , West, R.N. & Gerhardstein, P. (2007). The influence of training views on

infants’ long-term memory for simple 3D shapes. Developmental Psychobiology, 49(4), 406-420.

v  Kuhl, P. K. (2004). Early language acquisition: Cracking the speecg code. Nature Reviews

Neuroscience, 5(11), 831-843.

v  Mehler, J., Jusczyk, P., Halsted, N., Bertoncini, J. & Amiel-Tison, C. (1988). A precursor of

language acquisition in young infants. Cognition, 29, 143-178

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REFERENCES

v  Morais, J., Bertelson, P., Cary, L. & Alegria, J. (1986). Literacy training and speech

segmentation. Cognition, 24, 45-64.

v  Pascalis, O., De Haan, M. & Nelson, V.A. (2002). Is face processing species-specific during

the first year of life? Science, 296(5571), 1321-1323

v  Pena, M., Maki, A., Kovacic, D., Dehaene-Lambertz, G. Koizumi, H., Bouquet, F. & Mehler

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v  Robinson, A.J. & Pascalis, O. (2004). Development of flexible visual recognition menory in

human infants. Developmental Science, 7(5), 527-533.

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v  Share, D.L. (1999). Phonological recoding and orthographic learning: A direct test of

the self teaching hypothesis. Journal of experimental Child Psychology, 72(2), 95-129.

v  Shuwairi, S.M., Albert, M.K., Johnson, S.P. (2007). Discrimination of possible and

impossible objects in infancy. Psychological Science, 18(4), 303-307.

v  Son, J.Y., Smith, L.B. & Goldstone, R.L. (2008). Simplicity and generalisation: Short-

cutting abstraction in children’s object categorisations. Cognition, 108(3), 626-638.

v  Wang, S.H. & Baillargeon, R. (2008). Detecting impossible changes in infancy: a three-

system account. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 12(1), 17-23.

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REFERENCES

v  Zocolotti, P., De Luca, M., Di Pace, E., Gasperini, F., Judica, A. &

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developmental dyslexia. Brain and Lamguage, 93(3), 369-373.