TY - JOUR
T1 - The effects of reading amount on letter reading skill
T2 - A longitudinal survey of Japanese elementary schoolchildren
AU - Inohara, Keisuke
AU - Ueda, Ayaka
AU - Shioya, Kyoko
AU - Osanai, Hidekazu
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was supported by Japan Society for the Promotion of Science KAKENHI Grant Number 26880007, 16K17307, and 16J06872 and the 7th Hakuho Research Grant for Child Education from Hakuho Foundation. The authors would like to thank all the teachers and children who participated in this project. Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Keisuke Inohara, Faculty of Childhood Education, Kurashiki-Sakuyo University, 3515, Tamashima-Nagao, Kurashiki, Okayama 710-0292, Japan (e-mail: kei.inohara@gmail.com).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Psychologia Society. All rights reserved.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - This is the study to report Japanese two-year longitudinal reading amount data using the Title Recognition Test (TRT) and school book borrowing (the number of books borrowed from a school library) as measures elucidating the relationship between reading amount and Japanese letter reading skill. We found separate, significant positive effects for the reading amount indices on letter reading skill both one and two years later. For the longer duration, both indices had almost the same effect. We concluded that extensive reading increases knowledge of Japanese letters (in particular, the knowledge of the connections between hiragana and kanji). In addition, distinctive features of both indices of reading amount-TRT and school book borrowing-are discussed; school book borrowing, in particular, has not been used as an index of reading amount in previous studies, so we assert its utility here.
AB - This is the study to report Japanese two-year longitudinal reading amount data using the Title Recognition Test (TRT) and school book borrowing (the number of books borrowed from a school library) as measures elucidating the relationship between reading amount and Japanese letter reading skill. We found separate, significant positive effects for the reading amount indices on letter reading skill both one and two years later. For the longer duration, both indices had almost the same effect. We concluded that extensive reading increases knowledge of Japanese letters (in particular, the knowledge of the connections between hiragana and kanji). In addition, distinctive features of both indices of reading amount-TRT and school book borrowing-are discussed; school book borrowing, in particular, has not been used as an index of reading amount in previous studies, so we assert its utility here.
KW - Kanji
KW - Letter knowledge
KW - Longitudinal studies
KW - Print exposure
KW - School libraries
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U2 - 10.2117/psysoc.2017.85
DO - 10.2117/psysoc.2017.85
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85054769872
SN - 0033-2852
VL - 60
SP - 85
EP - 96
JO - Psychologia
JF - Psychologia
IS - 2
ER -