How to learn Chinese characters? Exploring the effectiveness of different learning methods in young Singaporean children

Biscriptal literacy development can be challenging if the two writing systems are starkly different. Past research on early Chinese word reading and instruction has mainly focused on children in Mandarin-speaking societies or adult foreign/second language learners. Recently, the number of studies...

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Main Author: Toh, Wendy Hwee Bin
Other Authors: Alice Hiu Dan Chan
Format: Thesis-Master by Research
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137108
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-137108
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::Linguistics::Psycholinguistics
Social sciences::Education::Chinese
spellingShingle Humanities::Linguistics::Psycholinguistics
Social sciences::Education::Chinese
Toh, Wendy Hwee Bin
How to learn Chinese characters? Exploring the effectiveness of different learning methods in young Singaporean children
description Biscriptal literacy development can be challenging if the two writing systems are starkly different. Past research on early Chinese word reading and instruction has mainly focused on children in Mandarin-speaking societies or adult foreign/second language learners. Recently, the number of studies on biscriptal literacy development in children has been growing. In Singapore where majority of the children are learning both English and Chinese in early childhood, it is particularly important to study the methods of Chinese word instruction to understand how we can effectively support young bilinguals’ reading development in Chinese. Using several training paradigms, this study examined the immediate, retention and transfer effects after different modes of Chinese character learning among Primary One students in Singapore. The character learning experiments used the same sets of Chinese characters to study three different modalities (viewing, free writing and structured writing) and several different encoding methods (Pinyin – romanised phonetic coding system of the Chinese script, whole character, stroke sequence and radical knowledge) in six learning conditions. To compare the differences in the learning outcomes, various aspects of character recognition were assessed for each learning condition. In addition, the study also investigated whether children’s level of radical awareness (RA), which refers to the perception of radicals and components that make up compound characters, would mediate the effectiveness of specific learning conditions. Findings of Experiment 1 revealed that the presence of Pinyin during character learning affected character recognition (CR) accuracy by interfering with the orthographic form recognition (OR) and sound retrieval among the low RA children. For the high RA children, however, the interference effects of Pinyin seemed to be limited to meaning retrieval only as the absence of Pinyin helped them to remember meanings better. In Experiment 2, it was revealed that generally, the repeated practice of character writing was more effective compared to repeatedly writing its Pinyin, especially among the low RA children. The findings of Experiment 3 demonstrated that the structured writing modality was effective for character learning and retention, be it focusing on radical/component or stroke sequence. In particular, it helped children remember the orthographic forms of characters learnt better for a sustained period of time. The structured writing modality, regardless of its v focus, was found to be particularly effective for the low RA children in character learning as it allowed them to improve their learning outcomes. The transfer effects of the trained characters on children’s visual analysis skills and orthographic awareness were also assessed for each learning modality. The results suggest that both writing modalities were able to mitigate the adverse effect of low RA on children’s visual analysis skills, regardless of their learning outcomes. The viewing only modality, on the other hand, was deemed less effective, as the adverse effect of low RA on children’s visual analysis skills could be mitigated only if the learning outcomes were good. Through this research, evidence regarding the differential effects of the learning modes has been gathered to help us understand which methods better cater to the learning needs of different groups of learners.
author2 Alice Hiu Dan Chan
author_facet Alice Hiu Dan Chan
Toh, Wendy Hwee Bin
format Thesis-Master by Research
author Toh, Wendy Hwee Bin
author_sort Toh, Wendy Hwee Bin
title How to learn Chinese characters? Exploring the effectiveness of different learning methods in young Singaporean children
title_short How to learn Chinese characters? Exploring the effectiveness of different learning methods in young Singaporean children
title_full How to learn Chinese characters? Exploring the effectiveness of different learning methods in young Singaporean children
title_fullStr How to learn Chinese characters? Exploring the effectiveness of different learning methods in young Singaporean children
title_full_unstemmed How to learn Chinese characters? Exploring the effectiveness of different learning methods in young Singaporean children
title_sort how to learn chinese characters? exploring the effectiveness of different learning methods in young singaporean children
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137108
_version_ 1683494508382126080
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1371082020-10-28T08:29:21Z How to learn Chinese characters? Exploring the effectiveness of different learning methods in young Singaporean children Toh, Wendy Hwee Bin Alice Hiu Dan Chan School of Humanities alice@ntu.edu.sg Humanities::Linguistics::Psycholinguistics Social sciences::Education::Chinese Biscriptal literacy development can be challenging if the two writing systems are starkly different. Past research on early Chinese word reading and instruction has mainly focused on children in Mandarin-speaking societies or adult foreign/second language learners. Recently, the number of studies on biscriptal literacy development in children has been growing. In Singapore where majority of the children are learning both English and Chinese in early childhood, it is particularly important to study the methods of Chinese word instruction to understand how we can effectively support young bilinguals’ reading development in Chinese. Using several training paradigms, this study examined the immediate, retention and transfer effects after different modes of Chinese character learning among Primary One students in Singapore. The character learning experiments used the same sets of Chinese characters to study three different modalities (viewing, free writing and structured writing) and several different encoding methods (Pinyin – romanised phonetic coding system of the Chinese script, whole character, stroke sequence and radical knowledge) in six learning conditions. To compare the differences in the learning outcomes, various aspects of character recognition were assessed for each learning condition. In addition, the study also investigated whether children’s level of radical awareness (RA), which refers to the perception of radicals and components that make up compound characters, would mediate the effectiveness of specific learning conditions. Findings of Experiment 1 revealed that the presence of Pinyin during character learning affected character recognition (CR) accuracy by interfering with the orthographic form recognition (OR) and sound retrieval among the low RA children. For the high RA children, however, the interference effects of Pinyin seemed to be limited to meaning retrieval only as the absence of Pinyin helped them to remember meanings better. In Experiment 2, it was revealed that generally, the repeated practice of character writing was more effective compared to repeatedly writing its Pinyin, especially among the low RA children. The findings of Experiment 3 demonstrated that the structured writing modality was effective for character learning and retention, be it focusing on radical/component or stroke sequence. In particular, it helped children remember the orthographic forms of characters learnt better for a sustained period of time. The structured writing modality, regardless of its v focus, was found to be particularly effective for the low RA children in character learning as it allowed them to improve their learning outcomes. The transfer effects of the trained characters on children’s visual analysis skills and orthographic awareness were also assessed for each learning modality. The results suggest that both writing modalities were able to mitigate the adverse effect of low RA on children’s visual analysis skills, regardless of their learning outcomes. The viewing only modality, on the other hand, was deemed less effective, as the adverse effect of low RA on children’s visual analysis skills could be mitigated only if the learning outcomes were good. Through this research, evidence regarding the differential effects of the learning modes has been gathered to help us understand which methods better cater to the learning needs of different groups of learners. Master of Arts 2020-02-26T00:52:26Z 2020-02-26T00:52:26Z 2019 Thesis-Master by Research Toh, W. H. B. (2019). How to learn Chinese characters? Exploring the effectiveness of different learning methods in young Singaporean children. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137108 10.32657/10356/137108 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University