Ellefson, Michelle R.,
Rebecca Treiman &
Brett Kessler.
2009.
Learning to label letters by sounds or names:
A comparison of England and the United States.
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 102(3). 323–341.
doi:10.1016/j.jecp.2008.05.008
Abstract
Learning about letters is an important foundation for literacy
development. Should children be taught to label letters by
conventional names, such as /bi/ for ‹b›, or by sounds, such as /bə/?
We queried parents and teachers, finding those in the U.S. stress
letter names with young children whereas those in England begin with
sounds. Looking at 5- to 7-year-old children in the two countries, we
found that U.S. children were better at providing the names of
letters than English children. English children outperformed U.S.
children on letter-sound tasks, and differences between children in
the two countries declined with age. We further found that children
use the first-learned set of labels to inform the learning of the
second set. As a result, English and U.S. children made different
types of errors in letter-name and letter-sound tasks. The children’s
invented spellings also differed in ways reflecting the labels they
used for letters.
Paper
Unofficial submitted manuscript, PDF format.
APA citation:
Ellefson, M. R.,
Treiman, R.,
& Kessler, B.
(2009).
Learning to label letters by sounds or names:
A comparison of England and the United States.
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 102, 323–341. doi:10.1016/j.jecp.2008.05.008