The unique contribution of handwriting accuracy to literacy skills in Japanese adolescents.

IF 2.2 2区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Sadao Otsuka, Toshiya Murai
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Abstract

There is widespread concern about declining literacy skills in recent young Japanese. The present study investigated how higher-level reading and writing proficiencies are underpinned by basic literacy skills in Japanese adolescents. From a large database of the most popular literacy exams in Japan, we retrospectively analyzed word- and text-level data for middle and high school students who had taken the exams during the same period in the 2019 academic year using structural equation modeling. We extracted main data for 161 students as well as six independent datasets for validation. Our results validated the three-dimensional view of word-level literacy (reading accuracy, writing accuracy, and semantic comprehension) and demonstrated that writing and semantic skills underpinned text writing and reading, respectively. The semantic comprehension of words affected text writing indirectly via text reading; however, it could not replace the direct effect of word writing accuracy. These findings, which were robustly replicated with multiple independent datasets, provided new evidence of dimension-specific relationships between word- and text-level literacy skills and confirmed the unique contribution of word handwriting acquisition to text literacy proficiency. The replacement of handwriting by digital writing (e.g., typing) is a global trend. However, the dual-pathway model of literacy development identified in this study suggests there are advantages in sustaining early literacy education by handwriting for the growth of higher-level language skills in future generations.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11145-023-10433-3.

Abstract Image

笔迹准确性对日本青少年识字能力的独特贡献。
近来,日本年轻人的识字能力下降,这引起了广泛关注。本研究调查了日本青少年的基本识字技能如何支撑更高水平的阅读和写作能力。从日本最受欢迎的识字考试的大型数据库中,我们使用结构方程模型,回顾性分析了2019学年同期参加考试的中学生和高中生的单词和文本水平数据。我们提取了161名学生的主要数据以及六个独立的数据集进行验证。我们的研究结果验证了单词水平素养(阅读准确性、写作准确性和语义理解)的三维观点,并证明写作和语义技能分别支撑着文本写作和阅读。词语的语义理解通过文本阅读间接影响文本写作;然而,它并不能取代文字准确性的直接影响。这些发现在多个独立的数据集上得到了有力的复制,为单词和文本水平的识字技能之间的维度特定关系提供了新的证据,并证实了单词手写习得对文本识字能力的独特贡献。用数字书写(例如打字)取代手写是一种全球趋势。然而,本研究中确定的识字发展的双途径模式表明,通过手写维持早期识字教育有利于后代培养更高水平的语言技能。补充信息:在线版本包含补充材料,可访问10.1007/s11145-023-10433-3。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
16.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Reading and writing skills are fundamental to literacy. Consequently, the processes involved in reading and writing and the failure to acquire these skills, as well as the loss of once well-developed reading and writing abilities have been the targets of intense research activity involving professionals from a variety of disciplines, such as neuropsychology, cognitive psychology, psycholinguistics and education. The findings that have emanated from this research are most often written up in a lingua that is specific to the particular discipline involved, and are published in specialized journals. This generally leaves the expert in one area almost totally unaware of what may be taking place in any area other than their own. Reading and Writing cuts through this fog of jargon, breaking down the artificial boundaries between disciplines. The journal focuses on the interaction among various fields, such as linguistics, information processing, neuropsychology, cognitive psychology, speech and hearing science and education. Reading and Writing publishes high-quality, scientific articles pertaining to the processes, acquisition, and loss of reading and writing skills. The journal fully represents the necessarily interdisciplinary nature of research in the field, focusing on the interaction among various disciplines, such as linguistics, information processing, neuropsychology, cognitive psychology, speech and hearing science and education. Coverage in Reading and Writing includes models of reading, writing and spelling at all age levels; orthography and its relation to reading and writing; computer literacy; cross-cultural studies; and developmental and acquired disorders of reading and writing. It publishes research articles, critical reviews, theoretical papers, and case studies. Reading and Writing is one of the most highly cited journals in Education, Educational Research, and Educational Psychology.
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