“…Other likely casualties of the century‐long Anglophone obsession with (oral) word‐reading accuracy include the study of meaning (i.e., morphology, morphological awareness), which has only begun receiving the research attention it deserves over the past decade or so (e.g., Berthiaume, Daigle, & Desrochers, 2018; Bowers & Bowers, 2017; Duncan, 2018; Goodwin & Ahn, 2013; Harm & Seidenberg, 2004; Ke, Miller, Zhang, & Koda, 2021; Kirby & Bowers, 2017; Kuo & Anderson, 2006; Levesque, Breadmore, & Deacon, 2021; Lin, Sun, & McBride, 2019; Rastle, 2018; Verhoeven & Perfetti, 2011). Oral reading accuracy, furthermore, also emphasizes phonological processes more so than silent (word) reading at the expense of orthography and morphology (for a discussion, see Share, 2008).…”