英文摘要 |
The present study examined whether the attainment of Chinese L1 EFL beginners’ letter-sound knowledge could be given a shot in the arm by utilising a revelational phonics approach (the RPA) that highlights rather than shrouds the complexity of English orthography. Chinese L1 EFL beginners (N =100), from the same underprivileged school, formed two groups to attend a 12-session phonics training course, designed with the essence of either the existing phonics practice within Taiwan’s Primary English education (the EPP) or the RPA. Those taught through the RPA outperformed those taught through the EPP in reading (sounding) and spelling unknown (unpractised) words, both of which are important early literacy skills identified in the alphabetic L1 literature as being underpinned by a good foundation in letter-sound knowledge. Such findings suggested that, compared with the EPP within the Taiwanese Primary English curriculum, the RPA was a significantly more effective approach to improving Chinese L1 EFL beginners’ letter-sound knowledge. Suggestions on the integration of the RPA curriculum into Taiwan’s Primary English education were discussed. |