Phonological Abilities of Children with Dyslexia in Jordan: A Whole-Word Approach

EURASIAN JOURNAL OF APPLIED LINGUISTICS(2023)

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摘要
Dyslexia is a learning disability mostly evident in inaccurately recognizing a word, mainly because of the deficit of the phonological components of a language. This research aimed to investigate the phonological abilities of Jordanian Arabic (JA) speaking children with and without dyslexia using whole-word measures. Data from Jordanian dyslexic children were compared between three reading groups (poor readers, typical readers, and advanced readers) through three tests: (i) phonological mean length of utterance (pMLU), (ii) the Percentage of Consonant Correct (PCC) and (iii) the Proportion of Whole-Word Proximity (PWP). Findings show that the typical and the advanced readers had a relative score in pMLU, PWP and PCC, which were significantly higher than those registered by dyslexic and poor readers. Additionally, three phonological processes were found in Jordanian dyslexic children's readings: omission, substitution, and metathesis. Omission was the most frequent process employed by Jordanian dyslexics, particularly in di- and polysyllabic nonsense words. The study concludes that whole-word measures can reflect the phonological abilities of children using both real and nonsense words. (c) 2023 EJAL & the Authors. Published by Eurasian Journal of Applied Linguistics (EJAL). This is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (CC BY-NC-ND) (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
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关键词
Dyslexic Children,Jordanian Arabic,Language Acquisition,Reading Abilities,Whole-Word Measures
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