Treiman, Rebecca & Brett Kessler. 2006. Spelling as statistical learning: Using consonantal context to spell vowels. Journal of Educational Psychology 98(3). 642–652. doi:10.1037/0022-0663.98.3.642

Abstract

Although English lacks 1-to-1 relationships between sounds and spellings, considering the context in which a phoneme occurs can often aid in selecting a spelling. For example, /ɑ/ is typically spelled as a when it follows /w/, as in wand, but as o when it follows other consonants, as in pond. In 2 experiments, the authors asked whether children’s spellings of vowels in nonwords were affected by the following (Experiment 1) and preceding (Experiment 2) consonants. The participants in both experiments had spelling levels that ranged from kindergarten and 1st grade through high school. Children with higher levels of spelling skill took more advantage of context, and use of preceding context generally emerged earlier than use of following context. The results are interpreted within the framework of a statistical learning view of spelling and spelling development.

Paper

Data

Summary by Type of Stimulus

Proportion of critical spellings:

ExpVowelStimulusExample Spelling gradeMeanStdevN
1
ɛExpɡlɛdK or 10.0220.08523
2 or 30.0190.06821
4 or 50.0470.13919
6, 7, 80.0830.15323
9 and up0.2320.28719
ControlɡlɛpK or 10.0170.05823
2 or 30.0100.03021
4 or 50.0470.07019
6, 7, 80.0130.03423
9 and up0.1530.26719
iExpʃɹidK or 10.3090.33723
2 or 30.3670.41421
4 or 50.5580.38519
6, 7, 80.6870.32823
9 and up0.7740.26619
ControlʃɹiɡK or 10.2700.30423
2 or 30.2900.34621
4 or 50.4370.40619
6, 7, 80.4910.32723
9 and up0.6000.24719
ʊExpʃʊtʃK or 10.1390.20423
2 or 30.5190.32721
4 or 50.5210.27219
6, 7, 80.4700.21223
9 and up0.3000.33019
ControlʃʊfK or 10.0910.17023
2 or 30.5710.35921
4 or 50.4160.36119
6, 7, 80.2260.23423
9 and up0.2210.33419
ExpʃaʊlK or 10.0570.14123
2 or 30.1810.26921
4 or 50.4110.36019
6, 7, 80.6610.30623
9 and up0.6420.33219
ControlʃaʊdʒK or 10.0220.08523
2 or 30.1330.21321
4 or 50.1840.23919
6, 7, 80.2130.22423
9 and up0.0840.10119
ExpdɹaɪtK or 10.0000.00023
2 or 30.0100.03021
4 or 50.0210.04219
6, 7, 80.1350.24823
9 and up0.0420.08419
ControldɹaɪbK or 10.0000.00023
2 or 30.0000.00021
4 or 50.0000.00019
6, 7, 80.0040.02123
9 and up0.0000.00019
2ɑExpskwɑnzK or 10.0400.15720
2 or 30.1360.16222
4 or 50.4940.32818
6, 7, 80.6630.26024
9 and up0.6380.30924
ControlslɑnzK or 10.0250.09120
2 or 30.0860.12122
4 or 50.1220.13518
6, 7, 80.2210.26424
9 and up0.1380.14724
ɝExpwɝdʒK or 10.2600.30520
2 or 30.2820.25922
4 or 50.3670.31818
6, 7, 80.2920.28124
9 and up0.1460.17424
ControlkɝdʒK or 10.1650.28120
2 or 30.1000.22322
4 or 50.0390.05018
6, 7, 80.0170.03824
9 and up0.0080.04124
uExpbudʒK or 10.7550.34920
2 or 30.7550.30422
4 or 50.6170.25518
6, 7, 80.7210.28324
9 and up0.7920.21524
ControlfludʒK or 10.7450.36220
2 or 30.5140.37122
4 or 50.2830.22618
6, 7, 80.3500.24724
9 and up0.4670.31224

Proportion of Most Common Spelling in Monosyllabic Vocabulary

The following table tells how often each vowel investigated in the experiment appears with its most common (modal) spelling in text targeted at children of various ages. The Learned column tells at what reading-group level the children begin to significantly distinguish between experimental and control contexts in their spelling of the vowel. Rows are sorted by the Average column, to illustrate the correlation between how common the modal spelling is and how long it takes children to learn to observe the experimental context when spelling the vowel.

ExperVowelGrade LevelLearned
PronModal Spelling135812Average
2ɝir.26.25.24.24.23.246k to 1
2uoo.38.37.36.36.35.3622 to 3
1iea.42.41.41.41.41.4114 to 5
1ʊoo.48.48.48.48.45.4736 to 8
2ɑo.55.51.51.51.50.5144 to 5
1ou.62.63.63.63.64.6304 to 5
1i.66.66.66.67.67.6646 to 8
1ɛe.75.74.73.73.74.7396 to 8

Vocabulary

CSV file summarizing vocabulary counts across grades.

For each reading-level group, statistics were computed with vocabulary counts appropriate to the upper end of the group, as per Zeno et al. For the first group, these were combined kindergarten/grade 1 counts; for the remaining groups, Grade 3, 5, 8, and 12, respectively. Words were counted only if Zeno broke down the statistics by grade level.

Summaries by grade. The brief listings include counts for each of the spellings used for the vowels; the full listings include also a list of all of the words used in the counts:

Grade
(K-)1 Brief Full
(2-)3 Brief Full
(4-)5 Brief Full
(6-)8 Brief Full
(9-)12 Brief Full

Criteria used for counting words:

Consistencies of Vowels

CSV file showing spelling (sound to letter) consistency of each vowel in the study, computed over all environments. The frequencies used in the computations weight each word by the log of its frequency (+ 2) for the relevant grades as given by Zeno et al.

APA citation:

Treiman, R., & Kessler, B. (2006). Spelling as statistical learning: Using consonantal context to spell vowels. Journal of Educational Psychology, 98, 642–652. doi:10.1037/0022-0663.98.3.642


Webster: Brett Kessler
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Last change 2009-08-04T13:21:48-0500.