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Linguistics

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Title: Linguistics


1
Linguistics Literacy L2 Literacy Semester 2,
2004
  • Lecture slides and notes
  • Week 2

2
The reading process
  • Aims of the lecture
  • Give an overview of the reading process and how
    it is studied.
  • Introduce key concepts and terms.
  • Develop an understanding of the complexity of
    the reading process

3
Key terms
  • Top-down Bottom-up
  • Interactive Dual route
  • Background knowledge Schemata
  • Phonology Orthography
  • Inferencing Comprehension (vs reading)
  • Skills Strategies

4
Reading as a cognitive activity
  • The main focus is on reading as a cognitive
    activity.
  • What is cognition?
  • .the act or process of knowing

5
Types of reading models
  • Process models
  • Componential models

6
Process models
  • Approaches that attempt to describe the actual
    processes involved in reading
  • bottom-up
  • top-down
  • interactive
  • interactive-compensatory
  • information processing approach

7
Bottom-up approaches
  • Bottom-up approaches begin with the stimulus
    i.e., letters and words, and work up to the
    meaning.
  • Sequential or simultaneous?

8
  • Gough's 1972 model of reading aloud
  • SCANNER
  • DECODER
  • LEXICON
  • SYNTACTIC
  • SEMANTIC RULES
  • VOCAL SYSTEM

9
Letter recognition is not strictly sequential
  • How many ds?
  • cpme qwdz mxuw ndkn
  • make axle odor dunk
  • Letters in words are recognised more quickly than
    letters alone.

10
Top-down approaches
  • Expectations of the reader play a key role. The
    reader is seen as bringing hypotheses to the
    text, and using the text data to confirm or deny
    the hypotheses.
  • Reading as a psycholinguistic guessing game
  • Goodman, 1967

11
Interactive approaches
  • Reading comprehension is the result of the
    interaction of multiple sources of information.
  • e.g. Rumelhart (1977)

12
Just Carpenter Model of Reading
  • Get next input
  • Move eyes
  •  
  • Extract
  • Physical Features
  •  
  • Encode Word
  • Assign Case
  • Roles
  • Integrate with
  • Presentation
  • of Previous Text
  • End of sentence
  • ?
  • Sentence wrap-up

LONG TERMMEMORY orthography phonology syntax sema
ntics pragmatics world knowledge
WORKING MEMORY activated representations physical
features Words Meanings case roles clauses Etc.
No
YES
13
Interactive-compensatory approaches
  • A weakness in one area (e.g., vocabulary) is
    compensated by strength in another area
    (syntactic knowledge)

14
Componential models
  • Approaches that focus on the components of the
    reading process what the reader has to know
  • two-component model
  • word recognition linguistic comprehension
  • three-component model
  • language, literacy world knowledge
    (Bernhardt, 1991)
  • (Coady, 1996)

15
Two-component model
  • Word recognition accessing meaning of words
    through phonological look-up
  • Linguistic comprehension ability to answer
    questions
  • Distinction between language skills and reading
    skills

16
Components of reading
  • Word recognition
  • Feature detection
  • Letter detection
  • Word detection
  • Two routes direct versus phonological access
  • The effect of script

17
Two routes to the mental lexicon
  • Direct straight from visual input to meaning
  • Phonological from visual input to sound to
    meaning
  • English tends to rely on direct route but
    phonological influence is also evident e.g., word
    recognition slowed down by similar
    spelling/different sounding words touch is
    read slower when preceded by couch
  • Also pseudohomophone effect phock is
    recognised slower than boik

18
Three-component model
  • Language word structure, word meaning, syntax
    and morphology
  • Literacy knowing how to approach the text,
    knowing what the text is for and what ones
    purpose is in using it
  • World knowledge knowledge of topic
  • (Bernhardt, 1991)

19
Knowledge components of reading (1)
  • Phonology sounds of the language
  • Orthography script and mapping of sound to
    script
  • Words
  • Word structure (morphology)

20
Knowledge components of reading (2)
  • Sentence-level grammar
  • Inferencing Going beyond the text e.g., bridging
    inferences relate new information to old
    information and allow us to maintain textual
    coherence
  • Vlad looked around the castle. The moat was dry.
  • We assume the castle that contains the moat in
    sentence two is the same castle as in sentence
    one.

21
Knowledge components of reading (3)
  • Background knowledge
  • Schema theory the effect of higher level
    knowledge structures on learning and
    comprehension
  • Formal knowledge about the formal structure of
    texts
  • Content Knowledge about content

22
Knowledge components of reading (4)
  • Literacy what to do with the text
  • Communicative intent authors intended effect on
    reader
  • Content things discussed
  • Structure how content is organised
  • Status of information already established or
    proposed

23
Cognitive processes in reading
  • Comprehension
  • Skills
  • Strategies

24
Reading comprehension
  • Comprehension understanding of a text.
  • Where does reading start and understanding begin?
  • Is comprehension a product or process?

25
Cognitive reading skills
  • Skills "A cognitive ability which a person is
    able to use when interacting with text." (p88)

26
A skill taxonomy
  • 1. Recognise script
  • 2. Recognise words and phrases
  • 2. Deduce meaning of words
  • 3. Understand explicitly stated information
  • 4. Understand relations within sentences
  • 5. Understand relations between sentences
    (textual relations)
  • 6. Understand sequence of ideas (temporal
    spatial)
  • 7. Understand conceptual relations (cause
    effect)
  • 8. Predict what will come
  • 9. Identify main idea
  • 10. Generalise draw conclusions
  • 11. Understand information not explicitly stated
    (inferences)
  • 12. Skim scan
  • 13. Read critically evaluate

27
Strategies
  • - actions that readers take voluntarily to
    develop an understanding of what is read.

28
Examples of strategies
  • Use of context to define a word
  • Paraphrasing
  • On-going self-evaluation
  • Attempt to predict meaning
  • Re-reading and review
  • Skipping incomprehensible sections

29
Kinds of reading
  • Search reading
  • Skimming
  • Scanning
  • Careful reading
  • Browsing

30
Strategies and skills
  • " A skill is an ability which has been
    automatised and operates largely unconsciously,
    whereas a strategy is a conscious procedure
    carried out in order to solve a problem." (pp98)

31
Sources of reading research (1)
  • Psychology
  • associative learning and goal-directed behaviour
  • Education psychology
  • phonics versus the whole word approach

32
Knowledge components of reading (2)
  • Psycholinguistics reading as information
    processing
  • Neuroscience localising reading in the brain

33
A definition of reading
  • Reading is a process of translating signs and
    symbols into meanings and incorporating the new
    information into cognitive or affective
    structures. (Robeck Wallace, 1990, p 27)

34
Discussion question
  • The focus in the lecture has been on reading as a
    cognitive process. In what ways is it also social
    process?

35
  • As a social process reading is used to
    establish, structure, and maintain social
    relationships between and among peoples...a
    sociolinguistic perspective on reading requires
    exploring how reading is used to establish a
    social context while simultaneously exploring how
    the social context influences reading praxis and
    the communication of meaning.
  • Bloome and Greene,1984, pp395-396 cited in
    Bernhardt, 1991, p9.

36
References
  • Urquhart, S. Weir, C. (1998). Chapter 2. The
    Theory of Reading. In Reading in a second
    language Process, product and practice (pp.
    37-107). London Longman.
  • Bernhardt, E. B. (1991). Chapter 1. The nature
    of second language reading (p 1-17). In Reading
    development in a second language. Norwood, NJ
    Ablex.

37
  • Last slide week2
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