Abstract :
Early efforts to apply knowledge of dialect differences to reading stressed the importance of the
distinction between differences in pronunciation and mistakes in reading. This study develops amethod
of estimating the probability that a given oral reading that deviates from the text is a true reading error
by observing the semantic impact of the given pronunciation on the child’s reading of the text that
immediately follows. A diagnostic oral reading test was administered to 627 children who scored
in the 33rd percentile range and below on state-mandated assessments in reading in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, Atlanta, Georgia, and California elementary schools. Subjects were African American,
European American, and Latino, including Latinos who learned to read in Spanish and in English first.
For 12 types of dialect-related deviations from the text that were studied, the error rates in reading
the following text were calculated for correct readings, incorrect readings, and potential errors. For
African Americans, many of these potential errors behaved like correct readings. The opposite pattern
was found for Latinos who learned to read in Spanish first: most types of potential errors showed the
high percentage of following errors that is characteristic of true errors.