Abstract

Morphological awareness, vocabulary knowledge, and reading comprehension are intertwined and develop together in Chinese children. This study simultaneously examined the reciprocal relationships between these three skills in a 4-year longitudinal sample of 142 third-grade Chinese-speaking students. After controlling for non-verbal intelligence, rapid automatized naming, phonological awareness, orthographic awareness, and word reading at the initial level, the cross-lagged model results showed that (1) morphological awareness and vocabulary knowledge were significantly related to each other in grades 3 to 4, while no reciprocal longitudinal relationship between morphological awareness and vocabulary knowledge emerged in grades 4 to 6; (2) morphological awareness in grade 3 did not have a predictive effect on reading comprehension in grade 4, but morphological awareness in grade 4 had a significant effect on reading comprehension in grade 6. Reversely, reading comprehension was a stable predictor of later morphological awareness in grades 3 to 4 and grades 4 to 6; and (3) there were bidirectional predictive relationships between vocabulary knowledge and reading comprehension in grades 3 to 4 and grades 4 to 6. These findings indicate the symbiotic associations between morphological awareness, vocabulary knowledge, and reading comprehension, and highlight the dynamic and reciprocal nature of these three skills in Chinese children.

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