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Language and Education
Editor: Viv Edwards (University of Reading, UK)


Volume: 16  Number: 1  Page: 1–17

Word Segmentation in Early Written Narratives
Emilia Ferreiro and Clotilde Pontecorvo

This comparative study aims at understanding which the difficulties children face in word segmentation in early writings. The term 'word' is both a metalinguistic and an everyday term. Rules about word separation have evolved over many years and are now normative in the languages these children are trying to write: Italian, Portuguese, Spanish. Children hesitate precisely at those places where historically there was also hesitation. They probably face similar difficulties with the conceptual definition of the 'word'. A total of 987 texts written by second- and third-grade children (7 to 9 years) were collected in Argentina, Brazil, Italy, Mexico and Uruguay, in a large number of different schools. The children were asked to write the story of Little Red Riding Hood, well known by children in those cultures. The normative view led to a quantitative analysis of 'deviations' from present language orthographies to give an overall picture of the situation. The interpretative attitude aimed at understanding children's writing and is related to a qualitative analysis of the written strings where the most of the deviations are located. Illegal segmentations in Italian and Spanish concentrate in specific graphic positions, that are similarfor hypo- and hyper-segmentations in the two writing systems.

© Multilingual Matters 2002

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