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Development of early morphological awareness in Greek: Epilinguistic versus metalinguistic and inflectional versus derivational awareness

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 November 2017

VASSILIKI DIAMANTI*
Affiliation:
University of Crete and University of Oslo
ARGYRO BENAKI
Affiliation:
American College of Greece
ANGELIKI MOUZAKI
Affiliation:
University of Crete
ASIMINA RALLI
Affiliation:
University of Athens
FAYE ANTONIOU
Affiliation:
University of Athens
SOPHIA PAPAIOANNOU
Affiliation:
University of Crete
ATHANASSIOS PROTOPAPAS
Affiliation:
University of Athens and University of Oslo
*
ADDRESS FOR CORRESPONDENCE Vassiliki Diamanti, Special Needs Education, University of Oslo, P.O. Box 1140, Blindern, 0318 Oslo, Norway; E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

This cross-sectional study examined the development of morphological awareness in Greek children 4–7 years old. A distinction was adopted between epilinguistic control, evidenced in judgment tasks and indicative of elementary levels of awareness, and metalinguistic awareness, evidenced in production tasks and indicative of full-blown conscious awareness. The morphological domains of inflectional and derivational morphology were specifically contrasted to determine whether they follow distinct developmental trajectories. Trial-level performance data from 236 children in four morphological awareness tasks as a function of age were modeled using generalized additive models. Significant performance increase with age was found for all four awareness tasks. The results further indicated that production of derivational morphemes was consistently more difficult than production of inflectional morphemes and judgment of derivational morphemes, whereas the differences between the two inflectional and between the two judgment tasks were not significant. This suggests that at these ages, epilinguistic control is similarly effective for the two morphological domains whereas full metalinguistic awareness of derivational morphology trails behind that of inflectional morphology, at least as measured by these specific tasks. The findings highlight the need for early tracking and finer distinctions within the domain of morphological awareness, to identify and potentially enhance the critical skills related to the development of vocabulary and reading comprehension.

Type
Original Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017 

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