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    Rights statement: The final, definitive version of this article has been published in the Journal, Journal of Learning Disabilities, ? (?), 2017, © SAGE Publications Ltd, 2017 by SAGE Publications Ltd at the Journal of Learning Disabilities page: http://journals.sagepub.com/home/ldx on SAGE Journals Online: http://journals.sagepub.com/

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Reading and Phonological Awareness in Africa

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E-pub ahead of print

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Reading and Phonological Awareness in Africa. / Alcock, Katherine J.; Ngorosho, Damaris S; Jukes, Matthew C H.
In: Journal of Learning Disabilities, 11.09.2017.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Alcock, KJ, Ngorosho, DS & Jukes, MCH 2017, 'Reading and Phonological Awareness in Africa', Journal of Learning Disabilities. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022219417728051

APA

Alcock, K. J., Ngorosho, D. S., & Jukes, M. C. H. (2017). Reading and Phonological Awareness in Africa. Journal of Learning Disabilities. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022219417728051

Vancouver

Alcock KJ, Ngorosho DS, Jukes MCH. Reading and Phonological Awareness in Africa. Journal of Learning Disabilities. 2017 Sept 11. Epub 2017 Sept 11. doi: 10.1177/0022219417728051

Author

Alcock, Katherine J. ; Ngorosho, Damaris S ; Jukes, Matthew C H. / Reading and Phonological Awareness in Africa. In: Journal of Learning Disabilities. 2017.

Bibtex

@article{f362ba3ab2ed4e9c901729844904ee42,
title = "Reading and Phonological Awareness in Africa",
abstract = "Literacy levels in Africa are low, and school instruction outcomes are not promising. Africa also has a disproportionate number of unschooled children. Phonological awareness (PA), especially phoneme awareness, is critically associated with literacy, but there is little evidence about whether PA is gained through literacy, schooling, or both, because most children studied are in education and can read at least letters. Our previous study of PA and reading in children in and out of school in Tanzania found that PA was associated with reading ability, not schooling or age, and many unschooled children learned to read. We retested 85 children from the baseline study, on measures of PA and literacy, approximately 2 years later. We found that more unschooled children had now learned to read but PA had generally not improved for these children. Unschooled children were still poorer at PA than schooled children. At 2 years, schooling now independently predicted PA and literacy. PA also predicted literacy and vice versa. Explicit phoneme awareness was again poor, even in accurate readers. More unschooled children have now learned to read, possibly because local literacy is in their first language; however, schooling improves reading and PA.",
keywords = "literacy, Africa, phonological awareness, schooling, unschooled children",
author = "Alcock, {Katherine J.} and Ngorosho, {Damaris S} and Jukes, {Matthew C H}",
note = "The final, definitive version of this article has been published in the Journal, Journal of Learning Disabilities, ? (?), 2017, {\textcopyright} SAGE Publications Ltd, 2017 by SAGE Publications Ltd at the Journal of Learning Disabilities page: http://journals.sagepub.com/home/ldx on SAGE Journals Online: http://journals.sagepub.com/",
year = "2017",
month = sep,
day = "11",
doi = "10.1177/0022219417728051",
language = "English",
journal = "Journal of Learning Disabilities",
issn = "0022-2194",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Inc.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Reading and Phonological Awareness in Africa

AU - Alcock, Katherine J.

AU - Ngorosho, Damaris S

AU - Jukes, Matthew C H

N1 - The final, definitive version of this article has been published in the Journal, Journal of Learning Disabilities, ? (?), 2017, © SAGE Publications Ltd, 2017 by SAGE Publications Ltd at the Journal of Learning Disabilities page: http://journals.sagepub.com/home/ldx on SAGE Journals Online: http://journals.sagepub.com/

PY - 2017/9/11

Y1 - 2017/9/11

N2 - Literacy levels in Africa are low, and school instruction outcomes are not promising. Africa also has a disproportionate number of unschooled children. Phonological awareness (PA), especially phoneme awareness, is critically associated with literacy, but there is little evidence about whether PA is gained through literacy, schooling, or both, because most children studied are in education and can read at least letters. Our previous study of PA and reading in children in and out of school in Tanzania found that PA was associated with reading ability, not schooling or age, and many unschooled children learned to read. We retested 85 children from the baseline study, on measures of PA and literacy, approximately 2 years later. We found that more unschooled children had now learned to read but PA had generally not improved for these children. Unschooled children were still poorer at PA than schooled children. At 2 years, schooling now independently predicted PA and literacy. PA also predicted literacy and vice versa. Explicit phoneme awareness was again poor, even in accurate readers. More unschooled children have now learned to read, possibly because local literacy is in their first language; however, schooling improves reading and PA.

AB - Literacy levels in Africa are low, and school instruction outcomes are not promising. Africa also has a disproportionate number of unschooled children. Phonological awareness (PA), especially phoneme awareness, is critically associated with literacy, but there is little evidence about whether PA is gained through literacy, schooling, or both, because most children studied are in education and can read at least letters. Our previous study of PA and reading in children in and out of school in Tanzania found that PA was associated with reading ability, not schooling or age, and many unschooled children learned to read. We retested 85 children from the baseline study, on measures of PA and literacy, approximately 2 years later. We found that more unschooled children had now learned to read but PA had generally not improved for these children. Unschooled children were still poorer at PA than schooled children. At 2 years, schooling now independently predicted PA and literacy. PA also predicted literacy and vice versa. Explicit phoneme awareness was again poor, even in accurate readers. More unschooled children have now learned to read, possibly because local literacy is in their first language; however, schooling improves reading and PA.

KW - literacy

KW - Africa

KW - phonological awareness

KW - schooling

KW - unschooled children

U2 - 10.1177/0022219417728051

DO - 10.1177/0022219417728051

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28891762

JO - Journal of Learning Disabilities

JF - Journal of Learning Disabilities

SN - 0022-2194

ER -