Abstract
Abstract Studies of Chinese children's reading have focused both on the development and impairment of literacy skills. This article surveys the basics of Chinese literacy development, considering the environments in which reading and writing are taught across Chinese societies, as these may differ in languages and scripts used. It reviews the macro-level variables in reading and writing and highlights the cognitive and linguistic skills that appear to be important for early Chinese reading acquisition and implicated in Chinese developmental dyslexia, including phonological processing, morphological awareness, and visual-orthographic skills. It further takes on parents and home literacy practices in relation to reading and writing achievement in Chinese children in light of a few relatively new studies on Chinese home environments. Although the focus of this article is literacy development in Chinese children, the vast majority of its coverage is on character and word recognition, rather than on text processing.
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