Pre-elementary Children With Imperfect Letter-Name Knowledge Are at Great Risk of Reading Difficulty in First Grade: One-Year Longitudinal Study in Japanese Hiragana

Yasuko Okumura, Yosuke Kita, Yuzuki Kitamura, Hoko Oyama

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

While letter-naming ability is a well-known preschool predictor of the later acquisition of literacy, little is known about an appropriate benchmark (i.e., how many letter names children must know at a given age) and how it may vary among different writing systems. The present study aimed to establish a letter-naming benchmark in Japanese Hiragana for pre-elementary children (age 5 to 6 years) and examined whether this benchmark predicts risk or success in later reading development via a one-year longitudinal survey. Children (N = 291) were assessed once in their pre-elementary year for Hiragana-naming accuracy and once in their first-grade year for oral reading fluency. As a result, the ability to name 40 of 45 letters was determined to be an optimal cut-off, and failure to meet it strongly predicted a risk of deficient reading fluency in first grade. These findings support the notion that Japanese children without near-perfect mastery of Hiragana-naming in their pre-elementary year are at great risk of reading difficulty in first grade. In addition, possible contrasts between Hiragana- and alphabet-naming indicated a need for further research in different languages and scripts to establish appropriate goals and policies for this foundational skill of reading in early education.

Original languageEnglish
Article number758098
JournalFrontiers in Education
Volume7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022 Feb 28
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Hiragana
  • letter knowledge
  • longitudinal
  • oral reading fluency
  • pre-elementary
  • reading development

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Education

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