英文摘要 |
This study longitudinally investigates the effect of children’s vocabulary knowledge and their ability to apply its semantic information on reading novel characters from grade 1 to grade 2. A 1-year longitudinal study with novel character reading task was used to investigate (a) the importance of receptive vocabulary knowledge on the development of character reading from grade 1 to grade 2; (b) the differences in character reading with single or multi-character words; and (c) the impact of vocabulary information on children’s novel character reading performance. A total of 126 participants were recruited in this study during their transition from 1st to 2nd grade. The results revealed that vocabulary knowledge was important in children’s character reading from grade 1 to grade 2, particularly when reading multi-character words. However, there is no significant difference between reading single or multi-character words. Nevertheless, the study suggested that both receptive vocabulary knowledge and vocabulary information affected novel characters reading significantly. In addition, children with better receptive vocabulary knowledge outperformed those with weaker receptive vocabulary knowledge when reading novel characters relying on their knowledge in vocabulary information. The theoretical implication and practical application of these results are also presented at the end of this report. |