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Abstract
The self-teaching hypothesis proposes that phonological recoding functions as a self-teaching
mechanism enabling the learner to independently acquire an autonomous orthographic
lexicon. Successful decoding encounters with novel letter strings provide opportunities
to learn word-specific print-to-meaning connections. Although it may not play a central
role in skilled word recognition, phonological recoding, by virtue of its self-teaching
function, is regarded as critical to successful reading acquisition. This paper elaborates
the self-teaching hypothesis proposed by Jorm and Share (1983), and reviews relevant
evidence. Key features of phonological recoding include an item-based rather than
stage-based role in development, the progressive "lexicalization" of the process of
recoding, and the importance of phonological awareness and contextual information
in resolving decoding ambiguity. Although phonological skills have been shown to be
primary in reading acquisition, orthographic processing appears to be an important
but secondary source of individual differences. This implies an asymmetrical pattern
of dissociations in both developmental and acquired reading disorders. Strong relationships
between word recognition, basic phonological processing abilities and phonemic awareness
are also consistent with the self-teaching notion. Finally, it is noted that current
models of word recognition (both PDP and dual-route) fail to address the quintessential
problem of reading acquisition-independent generation of target pronunciations for
novel orthographic strings.