Reading comprehension component skills of Chinese-speaking ESL and EFL learners

Date
2022-10-15
Authors
Ke, Sihui Echo
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University of Hawaii National Foreign Language Resource Center
Center for Language & Technology
Volume
34
Number/Issue
2
Starting Page
306
Ending Page
324
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Abstract
This research compared the contributions of lexical inferencing, decoding, and listening comprehension to reading comprehension in Chinese-speaking learners of English as a second language (ESL) enrolled in university bridging programs in the U.S. and Chinese-speaking university learners of English as a foreign language (EFL) in mainland China. The findings suggested that the contributions of these three reading component skills differed in ESL and EFL contexts: In the ESL context, both second language (L2) lexical inferencing and L2 decoding were significant predictors of L2 reading comprehension, but L2 listening comprehension did not correlate with L2 reading comprehension. In the EFL context, L2 lexical inferencing was the only significant predictor of L2 reading comprehension. Thus, it appears that the Simple View Reading (decoding + listening comprehension = reading comprehension) is not applicable to Chinese-speaking adult learners of L2 English because learners in both ESL and EFL contexts rely on word-level reading subskills.
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Keywords
Simple View of Reading, Chinese, English, writing system, context
Citation
Ke, S. (2022). Reading comprehension component skills of Chinese-speaking ESL and EFL learners. Reading in a Foreign Language, 34(2), 306–324. http://hdl.handle.net/10125/67427
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