English is toughest
European language to read
Despite being
the world's lingua franca, English is the most difficult European language to
learn to read. Children learning other languages master the basic elements of
literacy within a year, but British kids take two-and-a-half years to reach the
same point. In the
most extensive cross-national study ever, Philip Seymour of Dundee University
and his team compared the reading abilities of children in 15 European countries.
They found that those learning Romance languages such as Italian and French progressed
faster than those learning a Germanic language such as German and English. "Children
do seem to find English particularly complex and problematic though," says Seymour.
The team focused
on the earliest phase of learning to read. They tested the children's ability
to match letters to sounds, their capacity to recognise familiar written words,
and their ability to work out new words from combinations of familiar syllables.
Seymour's findings
might explain why more people are diagnosed as being dyslexic in English-speaking
counties than elsewhere. In
languages where sounds simply match letters, some symptoms just would not show
up, says Maggie Snowling, a dyslexia expert at the University of York. The condition
would be more difficult to diagnose in children who speak these languages, though
subtle symptoms such as impaired verbal short-term memory would remain. "People
might be struggling, but no one would notice," she says. Consonant
clusters The
Germanic languages are tricky because many words contain clusters of consonants.
The word "sprint", for example, is difficult because the letter p is sandwiched
between two other consonants, making the p sound difficult to learn. Another
feature of English that makes it difficult is the complex relationship between
letters and their sounds. In
Finnish, which Seymour found to be the easiest European language to learn to read,
the relationship between a letter and its sound is fixed. However, in English
a letter's sound often depends on its context within the word. For example, the
letter c can sound soft (as in receive) or hard (as in cat). Many words like "yacht"
don't seem to follow any logic at all. Historical
accident However,
the things that make English difficult to read might have contributed to Britain's
rich literary tradition. Words like "sign" and "bomb" are difficult because of
their silent letters, but these hint at relationships with other words. The connection
with words like "signature" and "bombard" is obvious. Mark
Pagel, an expert on language diversity at the University of Reading, acknowledges
the irony that despite being the international lingua franca, English is the most
difficult to learn. The dominance of English has more to do with historical accident
than any innate superiority of the language, he says. "People
who speak English happen to have been the ones that were economically and politically
dominant in recent history. Those forces greatly outweigh any small difficulties
in language acquisition." 15:30 04 September 01 By
James Randerson With thanks to the best
source of science research - New Scientist
(September 4th 2001). |