Teacher-Assessed Linguistic and Social Abilities in Chinese Children’s Reading Acquisition: A Longitudinal Study

  • Haomin Zhang*
  • , Yue Jiang
  • , Zhaohan Xu
  • , Song Yin*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

The study explored the relationship between teacher assessments of students’ general language-cognitive and social-emotional abilities and Chinese children’s reading development over an academic year. A series of reading measures (including reading vocabulary, reading comprehension, and lexical inferencing ability) were administered to Chinese-speaking second graders (N = 123) across time. Meanwhile, their six head teachers and assistant head teachers were asked to complete assessments of their language-cognitive and social-emotional abilities prior to the first data collection. By utilizing multivariate analyses, the results demonstrated that teacher-assessed linguistic and social abilities contributed to children’s reading abilities within and across time after autoregressive effects were controlled for. More specifically, language and cognitive abilities made a more salient contribution to reading performance over time. The study suggests that teacher assessments could have diagnostic and preventive functions for enhancing sustainable reading development among Chinese elementary-age students.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)297-307
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Genetic Psychology
Volume185
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 2024

Keywords

  • Teacher judgements
  • academic achievement
  • early development assessment
  • reading and literacy

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