New research explores best ways to teach reading and spelling to young children

EducationDaily

Teaching children how to identify and combine parts of words is an important component of a comprehensive approach to reading and spelling instruction, new Australian Catholic University research shows.

The study, led by ACU’s Australian Centre for the Advancement of Literacy, found incorporating morphology instruction into the primary school classroom improves students’ ability to read and spell.

Lead researcher Dr Danielle Colenbrander says the study, published in Educational Psychology Review, found morphology instruction – the breaking down of words into their meaningful parts – benefited students’ reading and spelling of directly taught words, with evidence it could also improve their ability to spell untaught words.

“Our review is the first to show that morphology instruction can lead to improvements in spelling words that have not been directly taught,” says Colenbrander.

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“For example, in a spelling lesson, students might learn about the suffix -ly, and they might practice writing the suffix in words such as ‘sadly’ and ‘slowly’. But later, a child might be working on a piece of writing, and they might want to write the word ‘loudly’, which they did not practice in their spelling lesson.

“If they use their knowledge of how to spell the suffix -ly to help them correctly spell ‘loudly’, then we would say they have transferred or generalised that knowledge to apply it to words they haven’t seen before in class.”

Lead researcher Dr Danielle Colenbrander says the findings from a new study can help teachers improve students’ ability to read and spell.

Supporting phonics teaching

Colenbrander says the meta-analysis of 28 studies involving primary school-aged children in English-speaking countries did not find clear evidence linking morphology to improved reading comprehension, but morphological skills were only a part of the underlying skills and knowledge involved in that process.

She says morphology instruction complemented the teaching of phonics – a practice that has largely been mandated in schools across Australia.

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“Knowledge of regular relationships between letters and sounds is important for providing children with a tool for reading and spelling unfamiliar words, and the process of sounding out or decoding helps to build ‘mental dictionaries’ of words that can be read quickly and automatically,” says Colenbrander.

“However, once children start to read slightly longer words, they will start to come across words with more than one morpheme. For example, ‘kicking’ has two morphemes – the base ‘kick’ and the suffix -ing. When students start to come across these longer words, that’s a good time to begin adding in morphology instruction alongside phonics instruction. And after phonics instruction is complete, morphology instruction continues to be useful into the middle and upper grades, as children learn to read and spell increasingly complex words.

“Morphology instruction is therefore another useful tool to help students become fluent readers and writers.”

Colenbrander, who is teaching a postgraduate certificate course on vocabulary and morphology this semester,
says that, once children had a grasp of frequent spelling-sound combinations, it was an ideal time for teachers to introduce morphological instruction.

“Teachers can begin by teaching the most frequently appearing morphemes, for example -ing, the plural -s, and past tense -ed, and then gradually build in other frequently appearing morphemes over time,” she says.

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“In addition to explicit instruction in the basics of morphology, children should apply their morphological knowledge in reading and writing activities, and discuss the morphology of words during reading, spelling and vocabulary instruction.”

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