Visual‐perceptual and phonological factors in the acquisition of literacy among children with congenital developmental coordination disorder

Abstract
Much research has shown that children with congenital developmental coordination disorder (CDCD) have marked impairments in the perception of visual-spatial information, a deficit which has been assumed to be causally related to difficulties that many CDCD children experience when learning to read and spell. However, current research in reading disability suggests that poor reading is mainly related to difficulties with the processing of phonological information or with metaphonological ability, not to visual-perceptual deficits. This study aimed to explore the relationship between reading achievement and the visual-perceptual, phonological and general cognitive ability of CDCD children. Twenty-eight children with a mean age of 8.3 years were tested on motor coordination, language, general ability, visual discrimination, visual-motor integration, phoneme awareness, phoneme discrimination, reading and spelling. Results showed that phoneme awareness was the most strongly related to reading and spelling performance, and that visual discrimination showed no relationship to reading ability, although it was related to spelling performance, phonological awareness, and motor coordination. These results suggest that CDCD children who have difficulty with the acquisition of literacy may suffer from visual-perceptual problems and metaphonological deficits, but these problems are differentially related to reading and spelling.