Development of silent reading fluency and reading comprehension across grades 1 to 9: unidirectional or bidirectional effects between the two skills?




Psyridou Maria, Tolvanen Asko, Niemi Pekka, Lerkkanen Marja-Kristiina, Poikkeus Anna-Maija, Torppa Minna

PublisherSPRINGER

2022

Reading and Writing

READING AND WRITING

READ WRIT

28

0922-4777

1573-0905

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s11145-022-10371-6

https://doi.org/10.1007/s11145-022-10371-6

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/177925250



Purpose: This study examines the developmental interplay between silent reading fluency and reading comprehension from Grade 1 to Grade 9 (age 7 to 15) in a large Finnish sample (N = 2,518). Of particular interest was whether the associations are bidirectional or unidirectional.

Methods: Children's silent reading fluency and reading comprehension skills were assessed using group-administered tests, at seven time points, in Grades 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, and 9. A random intercept cross-lagged panel model with latent factors was used to identify between- and within-person associations between silent reading fluency and reading comprehension. The use of latent factors allowed for the controlling of measurement error.

Results: The model showed that silent reading fluency and reading comprehension correlated at the between-person level, indicating that those who were proficient in one reading skill were typically good at the other also. At the within-person level, however, only some developmental associations emerged: in the early reading acquisition phase (Grade 1-2), silent reading fluency predicted reading comprehension, and in adolescence, reading comprehension weakly predicted silent reading fluency (Grade 7-9).

Conclusions: The results thus suggest only weak developmental within-person associations between silent reading fluency and comprehension, although some unidirectional associations emerged with a change in the direction of the associations over time.


Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 16:32