Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://cris.unibe.edu.do/handle/123456789/565
Title: Toward reading success in vulnerable contexts: psycholinguistic precursors and the simple view of reading
Autores: Cubilla-Bonnetier, Daniel
Marte-Santana, Hugo
Reyes-Ramírez, B.
Andújar-Avilés, J.
Sánchez-Vincitore, Laura V.
Researchers (UNIBE): Cubilla-Bonnetier, Daniel 
Marte-Santana, Hugo 
Sánchez-Vincitore, Laura V. 
Affiliations: Instituto de Neurociencias Aplicadas (INA) [anteriormente Laboratorio de Neurocognición y Psicofisiología, NEUROLAB] 
Instituto de Neurociencias Aplicadas (INA) [anteriormente Laboratorio de Neurocognición y Psicofisiología, NEUROLAB] 
Instituto de Neurociencias Aplicadas (INA) [anteriormente Laboratorio de Neurocognición y Psicofisiología, NEUROLAB] 
Research area: Ciencias Sociales
Keywords: Reading comprehension; Decoding; Phonological awareness; Socioeconomic status; Educational policy
Issue Date: 13-Jan-2026
Publisher: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)
Source: Education Sciences, 16(1), 110; 2026
Journal: Education Sciences 
Volume: 16
Issue: 1
Start page: 110
Abstract: 
In a low-reading-achievement context, this study examines the applicability of the Simple View of Reading in the Dominican Republic, a Spanish-speaking country, assessing elementary students across the first seven years of formal schooling, and it investigates the contribution of key psycholinguistic precursors to decoding fluency and reading comprehension across public and private schools. Structural equation models were estimated for a sample of 1168 Dominican students across three grade-level clusters and for each educational subsystem (public vs. private). Model fit indices support the adequacy of the proposed latent structure. Our findings reveal that decoding emerges as the primary predictor of reading comprehension in the early grades, whereas language comprehension becomes increasingly influential in later grades—although this shift appears to occur later than reported in other contexts, particularly within public schools. Moreover, phonological awareness contributes persistently to decoding (even in 6th–7th), supporting the hypothesis of delayed decoding automatization, which could account for the reading-comprehension difficulties identified in international assessments. Socioeconomic position exhibits a decreasing effect on reading comprehension as students’ progress through school, although it remains significant at all grades. These findings highlight the need for educational policy approaches that accelerate decoding automatization to free cognitive resources for comprehension processes, emphasizing effective phonological-awareness training and explicit, systematic literacy instruction.
URI: http://cris.unibe.edu.do/handle/123456789/565
DOI: 10.3390/educsci16010110
Appears in Collections:Publicaciones del Instituto de Neurociencias Aplicadas (INA) [anteriormente NEUROLAB]
Publicaciones indexadas en Scopus / Web of Science

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