Abstract

Phonological-based instruction, namely phonological awareness instruction (PA) and phonics instruction, has shown to be effective on early literacy skills among young children in western countries. Children who learn English as a foreign language (EFL) learn to read English differently from children in English dominant societies. Effectiveness of the instruction in the EFL context is much less investigated. The present study systematically reviewed 15 experimental and quasi-experimental studies published in between 2000 to 2016, on the topic of the effectiveness of phonological-based instruction in the EFL context. Study characteristics and instructional features were described, and effect sizes were calculated. Phonological-based instruction was consistently found to be effective among primary school EFL students on reading underlying skills including phonemic awareness and non-word reading. The median value of the effect size was moderate. In contrast, the effectiveness on word recognition (lexical access and pronunciation) and reading comprehension were inconsistent across studies. The median value of the effect size on word reading was small. This pattern suggests a limitation of the phonological-based instruction, which is the difficulty of transferring the phonological underlying outcomes to real reading. We found that most studies, although meeting the minimum standard of evidence for effectiveness, suffer from methodological flaws, thus they are potentially biased. Therefore, the positive effects reported in this study should be interpreted with caution. The implication for practice of this study is that including phonological-based instruction in the current English curriculum may be beneficial for young EFL students, thus they can better learn to phonologically decode English words. But not enough evidence has been found to support the instructional effectiveness on real word recognition and reading comprehension. Future research on this topic with rigorous design are needed so that strong causal inference can be made. The findings of this study provide novel insights into foreign language education of English for young learners.

Highlights

  • English has an alphabetic writing system, which means the print represents speech largely at phonemic level

  • We described characteristics of each study and the treatment instruction, followed by the report of the effectiveness on each outcome

  • Results of this systematic review showed a consistent pattern that phonological-based instruction has positive effects on phonological decoding and phonemic awareness

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Summary

Introduction

English has an alphabetic writing system, which means the print represents speech largely at phonemic level. Phonological decoding is greatly involved in learning to read in English. Phonological-based instruction, which focuses on explicit teaching of phonological analysis of words and lettersound correspondences, is shown to be effective in improving literacy outcomes at early stage (Bus and Van Ijzendoorn, 1999; Ehri et al, 2001a,b). Whether this approach is effective with children who learn English as a foreign language (EFL) has not been substantially investigated yet. Learning to read in English is challenging for EFL students. The development of English oral language and literacy skills of EFL students is constrained. This paper presents a systematic review of experimental and quasi-experimental studies on phonological-based instruction in EFL context

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