“…Bruck, 1992;Liberman, Shankweiler, Fischer, & Carter, 1974;Snowling, 2000a;Wagner & Torgesen, 1987). More direct evidence for the possibility that deficiencies in phonological awareness and alphabetic mapping may be causally related to reading difficulties comes from naturalistic studies, controlled laboratory studies, and intervention studies in which it was found that training that helped children acquire these skills had a beneficial effect on word identification, spelling, and reading ability in general (Adams, 1990;Blachman, 1994Blachman, , 2000Bradley & Bryant, 1983;Foorman, Francis, Novy, & Liberman, 1991;Foorman, Francis, Fletcher, Schatschneider, & Mehta, 1998;Hatcher, Hulme & Ellis, 1994;Lundberg, Frost, & Petersen, 1988;Olson, Wise, & Ring, 1999;Scanlon, Vellutino, Small, & Fanuele, 2000;Torgesen, Rose, Lindamood, Conway, & Garvan, 1999;Vellutino & Scanlon, 1987a;Vellutino et al, 1996;Williams, 1980). Thus, although there is abundant evidence that difficulty in learning to identify printed words is the manifest cause of reading difficulties in beginning readers, there is also abundant evidence that this problem, itself, is causally related to significant difficulties acquiring phonological analysis skills and mastering the alphabetic code, regardless of more distinct causes (intrinsic vs. environmental and instructional).…”