Early Reading for Students with Intellectual Disability Based on
Linguistic and Visual Perception Awareness
Endang Rochyadi and Riksma Akhlan
Department of Special Education, Faculty of Pedagogy, Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia, Jl. Dr.Setiabudhi No.229,
Bandung, Indonesia
endangrochyadi@upi.edu
Keywords: Early Reading, Intellectual Disability, Linguistic Awareness, Visual Perception.
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to find out the effect of early reading teaching model based on linguistic and
visual perception awareness on children with intellectual disability's reading skill. The method of this study
was quasi-experiment with a matching pretest-posttest control group involving a control group with IQs of
55-70 and mental ages of 7-10. The subjects were 66 students and 45 teachers across West Java province. The
results of the experiment showed that this model was proven to be significantly effective in improving reading
skills and managed to change intellectually disabled children's study habits. The influential factors of
linguistic awareness in improving reading skill were phonemic and syntactic awareness (path coefficient
value=0.72), while the ones in visual perception awareness were discrimination and visual memory (path
coefficient value=0.25). Linguistic and visual perception awareness influenced the whole reading process of
children with intellectual disability. This indicates that the maturity in linguistic and visual perception
awareness becomes an integral part of the whole reading learning process which the teachers should pay
attention to. The implication of this study is that linguistic awareness and visual perception awareness are the
prerequisites for early reading learning in children with intellectual disability.
1 INTRODUCTION
Reading is a crucial and fundamental skill to achieve
success in various fields (Sperlich et al., 2015;
Crowley et al., 2013; Moore, 2014). The low reading
skill of a child with intellectual disability is often
associated with his low intelligence. Studies have
proven that there is a strong correlation, i.e.
coefficient correlation of 0.36 to 0.84, between
reading skill and one’s intelligence, or called as
mental age (MA) (Barret, 1965). This strong
correlation happens at the mental age of 6. However,
when the MA of child is at 6.5, this correlation is not
as strong. This indicates that intelligence is not the
sole factor contributing to the failure to read of
children with intellectual disability (Glass and Cohen,
1986). Previous studies reported that visual and
auditory perception could also contribute to the
reading failure (Ducrot and Grainger, 2007; Stahl and
Murray, 1994; Bradley and Bryant, 1983; Kudoet et
al., 2015).
One of prerequisites for obtaining a reading skill
in a child is linguistic awareness (Harris and Sipay,
1990; Van Wingerden et al., 2017). Previous study
showed that a positive correlation between visual
perception ability and reading skill has contributed to
success in reading (Vismaia, 2003). A unique
linguistic predictor of reading for children in the
lower grades of primary schools is the capability of
understanding the text (Fuchs et al., 2012; Hood and
Conlon, 2004; Plazaand, 2007; Lord and Bishop,
2015). Phonological awareness training may also
improve skills in reading words (Channel et al., 2013;
Soltani and Roslan 2013, Ellis et al., 1989; Joseph and
Seery, 2004). Previous research with this type of
training has reported a good development of students’
reading skill during reading class (Cunningham 1990;
Chaves-Sousa et al., 2016). Those previous studies
suggested that reading requires some mastery of the
basic rules of phonology, morphology, syntax, and
semantics (Santrock, 2007), or if not - it requires of
all those aspects (Wagner et al., 1994). However,
these influenced aspects in linguistic awareness and
visual perception for children with intellectual
disabilities have unequivocally studied. Therefore,
this study was conducted to examine the most
influential aspects in linguistic awareness and visual
perception. The examined aspects in linguistic
Rochyadi, E. and Akhlan, R.
Early Reading for Students with Intellectual Disability Based on Linguistic and Visual Perception Awareness.
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Educational Sciences (ICES 2017) - Volume 2, pages 499-502
ISBN: 978-989-758-314-8
Copyright © 2018 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
499
awareness were the awareness of phonemes,
morphemes, syntax, and semantics, while the ones in
visual perception awareness were the discrimination
of shapes, spatial and visual memory, background,
and objects.
2 RESEARCH METHODS
This study used a matching pretest-posttest control
group quasi-experimental research design, with the
research variables: (1) The independent variables
include linguistic awareness (phonemes, morphemes,
syntax, and semantics) and visual perceptions (the
discrimination of shapes, figures, grounds, spatial and
visual memory). (2) The dependent variable in this
study is early reading mechanical skills that include
letter identification, sound blending, word attack, and
syntax. (3) Control variables are ones expected to
influence the ability to read, linguistic awareness, and
visual perception awareness. The control variables in
question are the IQs of 55-70 and the mental ages of
7-10. These variables are the intervening variables.
The quantitative data were analyzed using the
Pearson Correlation Test to find out the correlation
between linguistic and visual perception awareness
and reading skill, and then analyzed using path
analysis. The subjects of this research were 36
students who were chosen purposively as the numbers
of children with intellectual disability in Priangan
Timur (West Java) were relatively small, as small as
illustrated in Table 1.
Table 1: Research Subject.
3 RESEARCH FINDINGS
The result of the study shows that the influential
factors of linguistic awareness in improving reading
skill were phonemic and syntactic awareness (path
coefficient value=0.72), and of the visual perception
awareness were discrimination and visual memory
(path coefficient value=0.25). The findings are
illustrated in Figure 1.
Figure 1: The Influence of Linguistic and Visual Perception
Awareness on Reading Skill.
The reading skill comparison between
experimental and control groups is illustrated in
Figure 2. It shows that the increase in reading skill
scores of experimental group were higher than the
control group, the increase in reading skill scores of
experimental and the control groups were
significantly different. There was a strong correlation
between linguistic and visual perception awareness
and the reading skill of children with intellectual
disabilities.
Figure 2: Reading Skills of the Experimental and Control
Groups.
The different reading scores indicate the influence
of the mastery of prerequisites in reading. This studies
was very effective in improving children with
intellectual disability in three perspectives. First, in
time perspectives, the reading skill acquisition was
faster. Second, there was occurrence of learning
transfer, as indicated by changes in the knowledge
from the actual conditions to potential mastery of the
ability to read words and sentences they have never
learned. Third, there was changes in the attitudes and
beliefs of teachers to change the process of reading
teaching approach based on the mastery of
prerequisites that must be met before children were
taught how to read.
ICES 2017 - 1st International Conference on Educational Sciences
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4 DISCUSSION
The finding showed that the influential factors of
linguistic awareness in improving reading skill were
phonemic and syntactic awareness, while the ones of
the visual perception awareness were discrimination
and visual memory (Bradley and Bryant, 1980). This
finding is different from the previous study that
reported that there was a positive correlation between
all aspects of both linguistic and visual perception
awareness and reading skill (Wagner et al., 1994).
These differences may occur because of the
different exposure to language use, where the
subjects’ mental ages ranged from 7 to 10 and
chronological ages ranged from 10 to 14.
Chronological ages can indicate the language
exposure, and mental ages indicate reasoning issues
and the weakness of children with intellectual
disability in reasoning. This requires further
examination.
However, there is no doubt that linguistic and
visual perception awareness influenced the whole
reading process of children with intellectual
disability. This indicates that the maturity in linguistic
and visual perception awareness becomes an integral
part of the whole reading learning process the
teachers should pay attention to. In this study,
discrimination and visual memory are proved to
improve the reading skill of children with intellectual
disabilities.
The implications of the findings are as follows:
the process of learning how to read is about get the
children’s linguistic and visual perception awareness
ready. Teaching how to read by implementing
structure analysis-synthesis process that ends with
sound reposition, by implementing mediated
learning; i.e., learning how to read is carried out using
a scaffolding technique, the learning process should
be in the children’s zone of proximal development
(Eren, 2009).
5 CONCLUSIONS
Early reading teaching based on linguistic and visual
perception awareness was significantly effective in
improving the reading skill of children with
intellectual disabilities. This is evident in the increase
in their reading ability to read sentences that they had
never been taught before.
The positive effect was that the reading skill
acquisition was faster, the changes in the attitudes and
beliefs of teachers to change the process of reading
teaching approach. This approach can be an
alternative to overcome learning difficulties of the
children with intellectual disability.
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