Abstract

Chinese character learning requires various reading subskills, such as radical awareness and character knowledge. Radical awareness refers to learners’ ability to identify, analyze, and apply semantic radicals in compound characters. Previous studies have shown that radical awareness and character knowledge facilitate learning semantically transparent characters. Yet, little is known regarding whether radical awareness plays an active role in the meaning retention for nontransparent characters. The meanings of transparent characters, such as “河” (river) containing the radical “氵” (water), are related to the semantic category of the radicals within the characters, whereas the meanings of nontransparent characters, such as “淑” (kind and gentle) with the same radical “氵,” are not directly related to the radicals. To fill these gaps, this study included 39 L2 Chinese learners at one American university. They completed one character-learning session, and five radical-related and character-related tasks. The results suggested that radical awareness did not positively affect the meaning retention for nontransparent characters when learners’ character knowledge was controlled. In addition, character knowledge was a moderator, which shaped the relationship between radical awareness and character retention. Pedagogical implications for the understanding of L2 Chinese compound character learning are discussed.

Highlights

  • Chinese is a language with a morphosyllabic orthography, which has a two-level graphomorphological writing system

  • Results showed that radical awareness and character knowledge at all sublevels were significantly correlated with each other, as well as correlated with nontransparent character retention

  • A hierarchical multiple regression was performed to determine the relative contribution of radical awareness and character knowledge to character retention

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Summary

Introduction

Chinese is a language with a morphosyllabic orthography, which has a two-level graphomorphological writing system (i.e., the radical level and the character level; see Taft et al, 1999) This unique orthographic system is unfamiliar to Chinese learners who speak English as a first language (L1) and character learning becomes one of the most difficult parts in learning Chinese at the college level

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