TY - JOUR
T1 - Semantic and Phonological Decoding in Children’s Orthographic Learning in Chinese
AU - Li, Luan
AU - Marinus, Eva
AU - Castles, Anne
AU - Hsieh, Miao Ling
AU - Wang, Hua Chen
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the Australian Research Council [DP150100419]. This research is partly supported by grants from Australian Research Council (grant number DP150100419) to AC. We are grateful to the staff and students at Taipei Municipal Yucheng Elementary School, Taipei Municipal Zhongyi Elementary School and Taipei Municipal Hu Shih Elementary School for participating in this research. We also thank Peiyu Hsieh, Joyce Jang and Wei-Peng Lin for their assistance with data collection.
Funding Information:
This research is partly supported by grants from Australian Research Council (grant number DP150100419) to AC. We are grateful to the staff and students at Taipei Municipal Yucheng Elementary School, Taipei Municipal Zhongyi Elementary School and Taipei Municipal Hu Shih Elementary School for participating in this research. We also thank Peiyu Hsieh, Joyce Jang and Wei-Peng Lin for their assistance with data collection.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Society for the Scientific Study of Reading.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - In this study, we investigated if children build a print-to-meaning connection via the semantic radical–a mechanism we call semantic decoding–and its interaction with phonological decoding in orthographic learning of Chinese compound characters. Ninety-two Grade 4 children were taught the pronunciations and meanings of 16 pseudocharacters and were then exposed to their written forms in short stories. Half of the characters contained semantic radicals related to the taught meaning; the other half were unrelated. Half of the children learned the pseudocharacters’ regular pronunciations; the other half learned the irregular pronunciations. There was better orthographic learning of regular than irregular pseudocharacters across measures of spelling and orthographic choice. However, the effect of semantic decoding was not as unequivocal. The findings indicate that in Chinese, decoding via phonetic radicals underpins orthographic learning. Whereas, the effect of semantic decoding might depend more on the linguistic features of the radicals and the learning environments.
AB - In this study, we investigated if children build a print-to-meaning connection via the semantic radical–a mechanism we call semantic decoding–and its interaction with phonological decoding in orthographic learning of Chinese compound characters. Ninety-two Grade 4 children were taught the pronunciations and meanings of 16 pseudocharacters and were then exposed to their written forms in short stories. Half of the characters contained semantic radicals related to the taught meaning; the other half were unrelated. Half of the children learned the pseudocharacters’ regular pronunciations; the other half learned the irregular pronunciations. There was better orthographic learning of regular than irregular pseudocharacters across measures of spelling and orthographic choice. However, the effect of semantic decoding was not as unequivocal. The findings indicate that in Chinese, decoding via phonetic radicals underpins orthographic learning. Whereas, the effect of semantic decoding might depend more on the linguistic features of the radicals and the learning environments.
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U2 - 10.1080/10888438.2020.1781863
DO - 10.1080/10888438.2020.1781863
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85092185729
SN - 1088-8438
VL - 25
SP - 319
EP - 334
JO - Scientific Studies of Reading
JF - Scientific Studies of Reading
IS - 4
ER -