通过书写练习学习字母

D. Zemlock
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摘要

书写符号的视觉运动体验对阅读前能力(如字母知识)的影响,在针对幼儿的相关研究和针对较大儿童的实验研究中都被证明是促进性的。然而,目前尚不清楚是否任何精细运动练习都能产生这种好处,是否只针对写信,或者是否某些年龄的人最能从书法练习中受益。在这里,我们假设不成熟的精细运动技能产生的各种形式可能对手写训练的有益效果至关重要-预测年龄较小的孩子比年龄较大的孩子从训练中受益更多。采用2x2x2设计,将3 - 5岁学龄前儿童分为两个实验组(写信、写数字):时间组(写信前、写信后)、年龄组(年龄小、年龄大)和条件组(写信、写数字)。每组接受六周的训练。字母书写组和数字书写组分别练习书写字母(A-Z)和单个数字(0-9),每周练习四次。培训前后,每组直接接受针对字母知识的评估。我们预测,与年龄较大的组相比,年龄较小的组在字母写作条件下,在测试后的字母知识任务上的得分明显高于测试前的得分,而这种影响不会发生在数字写作组。结果表明,年龄较小的孩子在字母识别技能上确实比年龄较大的孩子表现出更大的进步,但这种效果对字母和数字书写组都有效。因此,这些结果表明,在年轻的时候,任何精细的运动练习都可以促进字母知识。
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Learning About Letters Through Handwriting Practice
The influence of visual-motor experiences with written symbols on pre-reading abilities, such as letter knowledge, have been shown to be facilitatory in both correlational studies on very young children and in experimental studies on older children.  However, it is not known whether any fine-motor practice will create this benefit, whether it is specific to writing letters, or whether certain ages would benefit most from handwriting practice. Here, we hypothesized that immature fine-motor skill that produces variable forms may be crucial to the beneficial effects of handwriting training – predicting the younger children would benefit more from the training than older children. Preschool-aged children, ages three to five years, were divided into two experimental groups (letter-writing, digit-writing) in a 2x2x2 design: TIME (pre, post), AGE (younger, older), and CONDITION (letter-writing, digit-writing). Each group received six weeks of training. The letter-writing and digit-writing groups practiced writing letters (A-Z) or single digits (0-9), respectively, four times per week. Before and after the training period, each group received assessments targeting letter knowledge directly. We predicted that the younger age group, compared to the older age group, in the letter-writing condition would score significantly higher on the letter knowledge tasks at post-test than at pre-test and that this effect would not occur in the digit-writing group. Results demonstrated that the younger children did show a significantly greater improvement in letter recognition skills than the older age group, but this effect held for both the letter-and digit- writing groups.  These results suggest, therefore, that any fine-motor practice at a young age can facilitate letter knowledge.
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