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The relations between morphological awareness and reading comprehension in beginner readers through to young adolescents

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published
<mark>Journal publication date</mark>1/02/2021
<mark>Journal</mark>Journal of Research in Reading
Issue number1
Volume44
Number of pages21
Pages (from-to)110-130
Publication StatusPublished
Early online date3/07/20
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

Background. Morphological awareness plays a crucial role in supporting higher level text processing. We examined its contribution to reading comprehension in children of different ages and ability levels in order to determine when and for whom morphological awareness is of particular importance.
Methods. Three groups of children (aged 6-8 years, N=128; 9-11 years, N=126; and 12-13 years N=147) completed judgement and production tasks to measure awareness of compounding, inflections, and derivations. Non-verbal reasoning, vocabulary, phonological awareness, word reading and reading comprehension were also assessed.
Results. Principal components analysis yielded a single primary factor of morphological awareness for each age group. Separate hierarchical multiple regressions revealed that this morphological awareness factor accounted for significant unique variance in reading comprehension for groups of 6-8 years and 12-13 years, beyond age, non-verbal reasoning, vocabulary, phonological awareness and word reading. Vocabulary also uniquely predicted reading comprehension in all three age groups. Quantile regression analyses at three points in the reading comprehension distribution (0.1, 0.5, 0.9) indicated that morphological awareness and vocabulary predicted reading comprehension to a similar extent across the ability range.
Conclusions. Our results clarify the fundamental role of morphological awareness in reading comprehension across all levels of readers. In addition, vocabulary and morphological awareness each make critical contributions to comprehension ability in developing readers across the ability range.