Phonological recoding and self-teaching: sine qua non of reading acquisition

Volume: 55, Issue: 2, Pages: 151 - 218
Published: May 1, 1995
Abstract
The self-teaching hypothesis proposes that phonological recoding functions as a self-teaching mechanism enabling the learner to independently acquire an autonomous orthographic lexicon. Successful decoding encounters with novel letter strings provide opportunities to learn word-specific print-to-meaning connections. Although it may not play a central role in skilled word recognition, phonological recoding, by virtue of its self-teaching...
Paper Details
Title
Phonological recoding and self-teaching: sine qua non of reading acquisition
Published Date
May 1, 1995
Journal
Volume
55
Issue
2
Pages
151 - 218
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