Miscue Analysis in School-Age Children
Document Type
Article
Journal/Book Title/Conference
American Journal of Speech Language Pathology
Volume
11
Issue
4
Publisher
American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
Publication Date
2002
First Page
407
Last Page
416
Abstract
It has been suggested that children who have trouble learning to read may use less effective decoding strategies than children who learn to read typically. The present investigation examined reading miscues (errors) made by typically developing children and children who demonstrated below-average language and reading abilities to answer the following questions: (a) Do typically developing children and children with below-average language and reading skills evidence similar types of miscues while reading aloud? (b) Do typically developing children make more grapho-phonemically similar errors (in which the error resembles the text word in two or more phonemes) and more nonsense-word errors than children with below-average language and reading ability and, (c) What is the relationship between the nature of reading miscues and comprehension performance? Results suggested that typically developing children made more miscues that preserved the meaning of the text than children with below-average language and reading abilities. Groups were equally likely to make errors that were grapho-phonemically similar and/or nonsense words. Comprehension performance for both groups was best predicted by omission of content words and phonologically similar real-word errors that maintained the meaning of the text. Analysis of oral-reading errors may be useful in prescribing specific intervention to improve automaticity and efficiency in reading for children with language-learning disorders.
Recommended Citation
Laing, S. (2002). Miscue analysis in school-age children. American Journal of Speech Language Pathology, 11, 407-416.
Comments
Originally published by the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. Publisher's PDF available through remote link.