Sensitivity of children to the frequency of syllables in the Spanish orthographic system

Authors

  • Marina Ferroni Universidad Nacional de General San Martín http://orcid.org/0000-0002-1133-663X

    Doctora en Psicología por la Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Miembro de la carrera de investigador científico del CONICET. Dirección postal: Ceretti 3553. Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires. Contacto: ferronimarina@gmail.com.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18800/psico.202001.004

Keywords:

Syllables, Frequency, Transparent orthography, Reading, Writing

Abstract

This paper analyzes whether children are sensitive to Spanish spelling regularities, that is, whether they store and access high frequency sub-lexical units like syllables. A spelling test was administered to 259 argentine children from 4th through 7th grades. The test included 26 low frequency words containing the syllables /be/, /bi/, /siar/ and /sia/ in both their possible forms (<BE>/<VE>, <BI>/<VI>, <CIAR>/<SIAR> and <CIA>/<SIA>), forms that vary in their frequency levels in the Spanish orthographic system. Results indicate that children are highly sensitive to syllable frequency. This seems to indicate that for transparent orthographies, such as Spanish, learners initially rely on grapheme-phoneme conversion, which leads to the storage of sub-lexical units.

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Published

2020-02-25

How to Cite

Ferroni, M. (2020). Sensitivity of children to the frequency of syllables in the Spanish orthographic system. Revista De Psicología, 38(1), 87–104. https://doi.org/10.18800/psico.202001.004

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Section

Articles