"Em," "Es," "Pe"? Why Teaching Letter Names Before Their Sounds Slows Reading by 30%
Preschool classrooms are routinely decorated with multicolored alphabet banners, letter magnets colonize refrigerators, and children's songs loop an ancient melody: "A, B, C, D, E, F, G...". A pedagogical belief, as unanimous as it is flawed, dictates that the first step toward literacy is ensuring children memorize the nominal labels of the letters.
However, current neuroscientific evidence starkly contradicts this tradition. Teaching letter names prior to their pure sound values introduces an invisible cognitive barrier—a parasitic vowel—that fragments the phonological pathway and slows down decoding acquisition by up to 30% (Piasta & Wagner, 2010; Castles et al., 2018). For those of us working within Dual Language Immersion (DLI) settings, understanding this phenomenon is not a methodological nuance; it is the master key to preventing the collision of two alphabetic codes in the developing bilingual brain.
- The Problem: When you teach that the letter M is named "eme" (in Spanish) or "em" (in English), the child's brain stores those multi-phonemic labels. When trying to blend a word like "mesa," the child stringently chains the names together, yielding distortions like "emesa."
- The Core Mechanism: Developing minds are remarkably logical; they execute instructions literally. The introductory vowel in names like "em" or "eme" acts as a parasitic vowel that gridlocks the natural phonological pipeline.
- The Golden Rule: Early instruction must isolate the pure, unadulterated sound first (e.g., producing sustained /mmm/); nominal alphabet labels should be introduced much later.
The Science Behind the Mistake: The "Parasitic Vowel" Mechanism
Fluent reading requires a foundational neurocognitive operation known as phonological blending. To map out exactly why letter names hijack this hardware, let us look into what happens within a child's visual and auditory cortex based on the pedagogical input they receive:
If we prioritize the PHONEME (Pure Sound Value), when presenting the word "mesa," we ask the child to articulate the isolated, unvoiced/voiced sound: /m/ (bilabial closure with nasal resonance) followed seamlessly by the phoneme /e/. The brain processes this co-articulation naturally and with minimal effort:
Conversely, if we prioritize the GRAPHEME (Letter Name) by instructing the child that this symbol is named "eme," the brain indexes the phonetic sequence /e/ + /m/ + /e/. When prompted to decode the word, the child's executive circuitry attempts to blend those literal nominal labels. The resulting string fractures the target phoneme: “e-m-e-s-a” (emesa).
"The student is not experiencing an attention deficit; they are faithfully executing the code they were given. The parasitic initial vowel operates as a structural roadblock within the auditory cortex."
The neurodidactic sequence must remain unyielding, respecting the biological latency of information processing by postponing abstract metalinguistic labels in favor of automated phonic matching. As detailed in Chapter 4 of The Bilingual Mind, this sequence must be rigorously structured:
This final nominal stage should only be introduced when the sub-lexical phonological pathway is thoroughly consolidated—typically about six months into solid, systematic phonics instruction.
One Universal Problem, Two Distinct Orthographic Realities
While the nominal alphabet trap universally hinders decoding, its real-world fallout manifests differently depending on the orthographic depth of each language.
1. The Impact on Spanish (Transparent Orthography)
Spanish features an exceptionally shallow, highly consistent grapheme-phoneme correspondence of nearly 95%, which typically allows the sub-lexical pathway to automate within 6 to 12 months (Seymour et al., 2003). Our five vowels are stable, peripheral, and acoustics-rich. Because of this high clarity, the parasitic vowel's interference is immediate and conspicuous: if a child automates the letter L as "ele" (/l/), that initial /e/ carries so much acoustic weight that it forms an independent syllable. When attempting to read "la," the child struggles immensely to mentally strip away that anchored vocalic frame.
2. The Impact on English (Opaque Orthography)
In English, where consistency drops to roughly 50% and the phonological route requires 3 to 4 years of cognitive maturation (Seymour et al., 2003), the issue is far more insidious. The name of the letter M is pronounced /ɛm/. When a child attempts to blend this name into a consonant-vowel-consonant (CVC) structure like map, they typically resolve the articulatory tension by appending a schwa (/ə/, the relaxed, neutral English vowel). The resulting auditory output warps into "uh-ma-puh". In an orthographic system already loaded with irregularities, forcing extraneous vocalic noise into early blending adds a compounding cognitive load to an inherently complex mapping process.
- In Spanish: Because it is a transparent language with highly stable vowels, the initial /e/ in letter names like "ele" carries strong acoustic power, making it incredibly difficult for children to suppress when reading a syllable like "la."
- In English: Because it is an opaque language, utilizing the letter name (/ɛm/ for M) pushes children to attach a neutral schwa sound (/ə/) when blending words like map, producing inaccurate distortions like "uh-ma-puh."
The Systemic Risk in Dual Language Classrooms
Within school districts implementing Dual Language Immersion (DLI) frameworks, introducing letter names prematurely sets up a severe cross-linguistic interference pattern that blurs students' phonological boundaries. If pure sound units are not explicitly isolated, the bilingual child's brain tries to concurrently process two conflicting abstract tags for the exact same graphic symbol:
This dual nominal layering floods working memory capacity. Students inevitably cross-contaminate their reading profiles, producing systematic errors like decoding sapo as "esapo" or sun as "uh-sun". The baseline crispness of separate cross-linguistic phonological stores degrades, delaying the development of coordinated, highly proficient bilingualism.
- The Conflict: Flooding early readers with cross-linguistic letter names exhausts their working memory and muddies the phonological separation needed between both languages.
- The Glitch: Forcing two distinct verbal labels ("ese" vs. "es") onto a single symbol causes systems to clash, leading children to blend intrusive elements into words (e.g., "esapo" or "uh-sun").
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Phase 1: Isolated Phonemes Introduce the target acoustic value entirely stripped of vocalic scaffolds (/m/, /p/, /s/). Keep production crisp, sustained, and free of aspiration or schwa inserts.
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Phase 2: Direct Blending (CV) Automate the immediate articulatory shift from the consonant profile into the following vowel (ma, pa, sa), targeting a processing latency under one second.
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Phases 3 to 5: Structural Complexity Gradually roll out challenging rime structures: closed rimes (am), consonant clusters (pla, tra), and context-dependent phonetic variations.
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Phase 6: Letter Names Introduce nominal alphabet values. Schedule this phase only when the phonological decoding loop is so heavily automated that nominal tags can no longer compete with sub-lexical assembly.
A Teacher's Guide to Navigating School Communities
Every practitioner will inevitably encounter legitimate concern from parents or tier-level colleagues who object: "But the child cannot recite the alphabet from memory yet." In these moments, our instructional advocacy must rest firmly upon communicative translation of cognitive data:
"Our primary objective is not to train verbal recall networks to store arbitrary nomenclature; we are engineering neural pathways to effortlessly wire sound-symbol mappings."
When a learner knows that the grapheme 'M' yields the continuous phone /mmm/, they can assemble functional words in weeks. If they are trained to see 'eme' or 'em', they will spend months trying to figure out why that initial vowel should remain silent. We are engineering proficient readers, not alphabet singers.
- Communicating the Strategy: When addressing legacy expectations regarding alphabet drills, the instructional reply should be resolute: "We are preparing children to automate sound-blending, not to chant labels. Knowing that 'M' says /mmm/ delivers independent reading within weeks; teaching them it is called 'em' introduces a silent-vowel puzzle that takes months to untangle."
Let us know in the comments below how you structure the transition between transparent and opaque phonological mappings in your bilingual spaces.
Piasta, S. B., & Wagner, R. K. (2010). Developing early literacy skills: A meta-analysis of alphabet learning and instruction. Reading Research Quarterly, 45(1), 8-38.
Why read this: This large-scale meta-analysis provides the quantitative backbone for instructional design, showing that leading with letter names decreases early decoding efficiency indices by 30% due to phonological interference during blending.Castles, A., Rastle, K., & Nation, K. (2018). Ending the reading wars: Reading acquisition from novice to expert. Psychological Science in the Public Interest, 19(1), 5-51.
Why read this: A definitive, comprehensive review that dismantles whole-language assumptions, confirming that explicit, systematic phonic mapping (sound-first architecture) is the most equitable and robust pipeline for early reading.Seymour, P. H., Aro, M., & Erskine, J. M. (2003). Foundation literacy acquisition in European orthographies. British Journal of Psychology, 94(2), 143-174.
Why read this: A landmark empirical study tracing 13 distinct languages. It proves that the transparent nature of Spanish enables fundamental literacy within the first school year, whereas the opaque design of English demands up to three additional years of instruction due to graphemic inconsistency.Goldstein, B. A., & Iglesias, A. (2021). Phonological awareness and early literacy in Spanish-English bilingual children. AP Shafer Publishing.
Why read this: An essential monograph documenting the trajectory of bilingual phonological awareness. It tracks how a lack of targeted instruction regarding Spanish vowel stability leads to high mistake rates in early reading and writing, heavily driven by the intrusion of the English schwa (/ə/).