A “Radical” Approach to Reading Development in Chinese: The Role of Semantic Radicals and Phonetic Radicals

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Abstract

Two studies investigating the significance of radical knowledge in Chinese reading development are reported in this paper. Study 1 examined the semantic radical knowledge of 20 Grade 1, 20 Grade 3, and 20 Grade 5 Chinese children in Hong Kong. It was found that various types of semantic radical knowledge, including the position and semantic category of semantic radicals, correlated significantly with Chinese word reading and sentence comprehension. Study 2 examined phonetic radical knowledge with another three groups of 20 Chinese children in Grades 1, 3, and 5 respectively. It was found that various measures of phonetic radical knowledge, including the function and sound value of phonetic radicals, correlated significantly with Chinese word reading. These studies found that, developmentally, the children started acquiring the knowledge of character structure, position, semantic category, and sound value of radicals from about Grade 1. However, they did not understand that the function of semantic radicals is to provide meaning cues in reading until Grade 3. The authors concluded that the radical is an important orthographic processing unit in reading development in Chinese. © 2003, SAGE Publications. All rights reserved.

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Ho, C. S. H., Ng, T. T., & Ng, W. K. (2003). A “Radical” Approach to Reading Development in Chinese: The Role of Semantic Radicals and Phonetic Radicals. Journal of Literacy Research, 35(3), 849–878. https://doi.org/10.1207/s15548430jlr3503_3

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