Longitudinal relationships between syntactic skills and Chinese written composition in Grades 3 to 6

Background Studies have shown that word dictation and syntactic skills are significant predictors of written composition performance among Chinese children in elementary grades. However, there is a paucity of research on the bidirectional relationships between these two cognitive‐linguistic skills (...

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Published inJournal of research in reading Vol. 43; no. 2; pp. 201 - 228
Main Authors Yeung, Pui‐sze, Ho, Connie Suk‐han, Chan, David Wai‐ock, Chung, Kevin Kien‐hoa
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Wiley-Blackwell 01.05.2020
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Summary:Background Studies have shown that word dictation and syntactic skills are significant predictors of written composition performance among Chinese children in elementary grades. However, there is a paucity of research on the bidirectional relationships between these two cognitive‐linguistic skills (i.e., word dictation and syntactic skills) and Chinese writing skills. Methods This paper reports the findings of a 1‐year longitudinal study tracking the developmental patterns of Chinese writing among students in Grades 3 and 5 in Hong Kong. The participants were administered tasks involving cognitive‐linguistic skills (working memory, word dictation and syntactic skills) and writing skills (narrative writing and expository writing). Results Multiple regression analysis revealed that word dictation and syntactic skills in Grades 3 and 5 were significant longitudinal predictors of Chinese written composition performance in Grade 4 and Grade 6. Syntactic skills, but not word dictation, contributed a significant amount of unique variance to writing performance after controlling for the autoregressor effect of writing. The results also showed that written composition performance in Grades 3 and 5 contributed unique variance to individual differences in syntactic skills in Grades 4 and 6, after controlling for syntactic skills in the preceding year and other cognitive‐linguistic variables. Conclusion The patterns of results underscore the significance of syntactic skills in Chinese written composition in upper elementary grades and the bidirectional relationship between syntactic skills and written composition in Chinese. Highlights What is already known about this topic Chinese word dictation, syntactic skills and verbal working memory are the major types of developmental skills important in Chinese writing among children in elementary grades. What this paper adds The longitudinal contribution of word dictation to writing performance across grades was mediated by the contribution of word dictation to concurrent writing performance. Syntactic skills contributed a unique amount of variance to writing performance across grades even after controlling for the autoregressor effect of writing. The longitudinal relationships between syntactic skills and written composition were bidirectional. Implications for theory, policy or practice An emphasis on grammar teaching in the context of writing may benefit both writing and syntactic skills development. Combined word dictation and composing instruction, rather than teaching word dictation alone or composing instruction alone, may enhance composing skills.
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ISSN:0141-0423
1467-9817
DOI:10.1111/1467-9817.12298