“…Research has shown that this metalinguistic knowledge is in fact not only necessary for developing fluent reading (review in English: Goswami & Bryant, 2016;in French: Alegria & Mousty, 2004;in German: Fricke et al, 2016;Landerl & Wimmer, 2008), it also contributes to the development of fine-grained perceptual abilities (review in Mayo et al, 2003), and interacts with speech production fluency (Noiray et al, 2019b;Saletta et al, 2016). Noiray et al (2019b) recently found that German children enrolled in the first grade performed better in tasks probing the manipulation of small phonemic units as compared to preliterate children, who only performed well with larger phonological units (e.g., syllables, rimes, see similar findings in preliterate French children : Caudrelier et al, 2019, in English: Morais, 2003; review in Shankweiler & Fowler, 2004). This suggests that phonemic decoding/encoding training in school stimulates children's awareness of the structural combinatoriality of their native language and improves their ability to manipulate various size compounds (e.g., Studdert-Kennedy & Goldstein, 2003;Ziegler & Goswami, 2005).…”