Reading Hebrew

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13th Century BCE
A01=Joseph Shimron
Author_Joseph Shimron
BCE
Category=CJCR
cognitive mechanisms in Hebrew literacy
cognitive processing
consonant
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eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
experimental psychology
Hebrew Nouns
Hebrew Speakers
Hebrew Word
Hebrew Writing System
Irregular Nouns
Kuntillet Ajrud
language structure analysis
letter
letters
literacy acquisition
Masked Priming
Mental Lexicon
Mishnaic Hebrew
Modern Hebrew
Plural Inflection
psycholinguistics
reading disorders
Regular Inflections
Root Consonants
semitic
Semitic Alphabets
Semitic Language
Shallow Orthography
signs
Sinai Desert
speakers
Sublexical Elements
system
vowel
Vowel Alternation
Vowel Letters
Vowel Signs
Word Formation
Word Recognition
words
writing

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805850765
  • Weight: 570g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Oct 2005
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Over the last two decades, the study of languages and writing systems and their relationship to literacy acquisition has begun to spread beyond studies based mostly on English language learners. As the worldwide demand for literacy continues to grow, researchers from different countries with different language backgrounds have begun examining the connection between their language and writing system and literacy acquisition. This volume is part of this new, emerging field of research. In addition to reviewing psychological research on reading (the author's specialty), the reader is introduced to the Hebrew language: its structure, its history, its writing system, and the issues involved in being fluently literate in Hebrew.

Chapters 1-4 introduce the reader to the Hebrew language and word structure and focuses on aspects of Hebrew that have been specifically researched by experimental cognitive psychologists. The reader whose only interest is in the psychological mechanisms of reading Hebrew may be satisfied with these chapters.

Chapters 5-8 briefly surveys the history of the Hebrew language and its writing system, the origin of literacy in Hebrew as one of the first alphabetic systems, and then raises questions about the viability (or possibility) of having full-scale literacy in Hebrew. Together, the two sets of chapters present the necessary background for studying the psychology of reading Hebrew and literacy in Hebrew.

This volume is appropriate for anyone interested in comparative reading and writing systems or in the Hebrew language in particular. This includes linguists, researchers, and graduate students in such diverse fields as cognitive psychology, psycholinguistics, literacy education, English as a second language, and communication disorders.

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