Hong Peng’s research while affiliated with China Rehabilitation Research Center and other places

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Publications (2)


Chinese children's character recognition: Visuo‐orthographic, phonological processing and morphological skills
  • Article

August 2010

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1,002 Reads

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348 Citations

Journal of Research in Reading

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Catherine McBride-Chang

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[...]

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Hong Peng

Tasks tapping visual skills, orthographic knowledge, phonological awareness, speeded naming, morphological awareness and Chinese character recognition were administered to 184 kindergarteners and 273 primary school students from Beijing. Regression analyses indicated that only syllable deletion, morphological construction and speeded number naming were unique correlates of Chinese character recognition in kindergarteners. Among primary school children, the independent correlates of character recognition were rime detection, homophone judgement, morpheme production, orthographic knowledge and speeded number naming. Results underscore the importance of some dimensions of both phonological processing and morphological awareness for both very early and intermediate Chinese reading acquisition. Although significantly correlated with character recognition in younger (but not older) children, visual skills were not uniquely associated with Chinese character reading at any grade level. However, orthographic skills were strongly associated with reading in primary school but not kindergarten, suggesting that orthographic skills are more important for literacy development as reading experience increases.


Phonological awareness in young Chinese children

February 2008

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1,918 Reads

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352 Citations

Two studies explored the nature of phonological awareness (PA) in Chinese. In Study 1, involving 146 children, awareness of phoneme onset did not differ from chance levels at ages 3-5 years in preschool but increased to 70% correct in first grade, when children first received phonological coding (Pinyin) instruction. Similarly, tone awareness was at better than chance levels from second year kindergarten (age 4), but increased strongly and significantly in first grade to 74% accuracy. In contrast, syllable and rime awareness increased gradually and steadily across ages 3-6 years. Patterns suggest different influences of age and literacy instruction for different PA levels. In Study 2, involving 202 preschoolers, variance in Chinese character recognition was best explained by tasks of syllable awareness, tone awareness, and speeded naming. Findings underscore the unique importance of both tone and syllable for early character acquisition in Chinese children.

Citations (2)


... Semantic comprehension forms another vital aspect of character recognition. Li et al. (2012) found that semantic knowledge significantly contributes to character recognition, particularly for characters with transparent semantic radicals. This suggests that effective teaching methods should emphasize character meaning alongside visual form. ...

Reference:

Impact of Interactive Multimedia on Digital Literacy Among Chinese Grade-3 Students
Chinese children's character recognition: Visuo‐orthographic, phonological processing and morphological skills
  • Citing Article
  • August 2010

Journal of Research in Reading

... Taiwanese speakers typically begin learning Zhuyin in the first grade for the first eight to ten weeks, where it is used alongside characters in textbooks until the fourth grade. Due to this extensive educational background, participants were highly proficient in using Zhuyin symbols (Chen, 2011;Hu, 2013;Shu, Peng, & McBride-Chang, 2008). The participant inclusion criteria for the study were as follows: (1) the participants needed to be native speakers of Taiwan Mandarin, and (2) the participants needed to have normal speech, hearing, and vision, as indicated by their self-reports. ...

Phonological awareness in young Chinese children
  • Citing Article
  • February 2008