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The Relations Between Early Working Memory Abilities and Later Developing Reading Skills: A Longitudinal Study From Kindergarten to Fifth Grade
Authors:Einat Nevo  Irit Bar‐Kochva
Institution:1. Edmond J. Safra Brain Center for the Study of Learning DisabilitiesUniversity of Haifa;2. Department of EducationWest Galilee College;3. Department of Educational PsychologyGoethe University;4. Center for Individual Development and Adaptive Education of Children at Risk (IDeA);5. German Institute for International Research (DIPF)
Abstract:This study investigated the relations of early working‐memory abilities (phonological and visual‐spatial short‐term memory STM] and complex memory and episodic buffer memory) and later developing reading skills. Sixty Hebrew‐speaking children were followed from kindergarten through Grade 5. Working memory was tested in kindergarten and reading in Grades 1, 2, and 5. All memory measures, but phonological STM, correlated with reading up to Grade 5. Regression analyses (with intelligence quotient controlled) demonstrated that phonological complex memory predicted all reading skills in Grade 1, and accuracy in Grade 2. The rather understudied visual‐spatial memory predicted comprehension in Grades 2 (STM) and 5 (complex memory). The results point to an important role of the phonological complex memory in early assessment, and suggest a long‐lasting role of early visual‐spatial memory in predicting variance in reading. Whether this role of the visual‐spatial memory is unique to the Hebrew orthography because of its visual features requires, however, further investigation.
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