... and that the reader rapidly spelled out the words.

teacherjapan

Member
Joined
Dec 8, 2023
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Javanese
Home Country
Japan
Current Location
Japan
It was formerly supposed that, when reading, the eyes move steadily along a line of print, bringing each letter in turn into clear vision, and that the reader rapidly spelled out the words.

Does the underlined part mean, “understand the spelling of the words?”

(Source is unknown, because this this the passage quoted for an entrance exam in Japan)
 

Tarheel

VIP Member
Joined
Jun 16, 2014
Member Type
Interested in Language
Native Language
American English
Home Country
United States
Current Location
United States
It's a guess. I guess it means the reader recognized the words.
 

PeterCW

Senior Member
Joined
Apr 1, 2020
Member Type
Interested in Language
Native Language
British English
Home Country
England
Current Location
England
It means that it was thought that people read the individual letters and then combined them to recognise the word. So if they see the word "cat" they read "c" then "a" then "t" and then realise that together they spell "cat".

Now we think that people recognise whole words by their shape. So when you see the word "cat" you recognise it without being fully aware of the individual letters.
 

5jj

Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 14, 2010
Member Type
English Teacher
Native Language
British English
Home Country
Czech Republic
Current Location
Czech Republic
Does the underlined part mean, “understand the spelling of the words?”
No. it means that they interpreted each word as a sequence of letters rather than a whole unit So, they'd initially read cat as /kə-æ-tə-kəæt/.
 

Tarheel

VIP Member
Joined
Jun 16, 2014
Member Type
Interested in Language
Native Language
American English
Home Country
United States
Current Location
United States
It means that it was thought that people read the individual letters and then combined them to recignise the word. So if they see the word "cat" they read "c" then "a" then "t" and then realise that together they spell "cat".

Now we think that people recognise whole words by their shape. So when you see the word "cat" you recognise it without being fully aware of the individual letters.
If that's the case, I could have told them they got that wrong.
 

Skrej

VIP Member
Joined
May 11, 2015
Member Type
English Teacher
Native Language
English
Home Country
United States
Current Location
United States
It is logical, because that's how we still teach reading. First step is letter recognition, second step is sound/letter correlation, followed by sounding out the letters, then blending into a word.

It's only once a word is permanently entered into someone's vocabulary does it become sight recognizable. Give even an accomplished reader some strange new vocabulary word, and they'll try sounding it out. For example, my doctor recently gave we a new prescription, which did have a generic form available. I still can't pronounce it by sight and have to sound it out.

However, we've always taught some words as sight words, typically ones that don't follow the general rules of English pronunciation.
 

SoothingDave

VIP Member
Joined
Apr 17, 2009
Member Type
Interested in Language
Native Language
American English
Home Country
United States
Current Location
United States
Yes, and there has been controversy in education over practices that want to skip the first step (letter recognition, sounding things out) and go straight to sight reading everything.
 

probus

Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Jan 7, 2011
Member Type
Retired English Teacher
Native Language
English
Home Country
Canada
Current Location
Canada
The reason we ask for the source of quoted material is to protect UE from legal liability for copyright infringement. I don't think a brief quotation in an examination question would constitute an infringement, nor woild a re-quote in our forum.
 
Top