Struggling with L2 alphabet: The role of proficiency in orthographic learning

Author:

Fu Yang1ORCID,Bermúdez-Margaretto Beatriz2,Wang Huili3,Tang Dong4,Cuetos Fernando5,Dominguez Alberto1

Affiliation:

1. Instituto de Neurociencia (IUNE), Universidad de La Laguna, La Laguna, Spain

2. Faculty of Psychology, Universidad de Salamanca, Salamanca, Spain

3. School of Foreign Languages, Hangzhou City University, Hangzhou, China

4. Faculty of Information Technology, University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, Finland

5. Facultad de Psicología, Universidad de Oviedo, Oviedo, Spain

Abstract

The present study examined the process of L2 orthographic learning in bilinguals with distant L1–L2 orthographies. Chinese–English bilinguals with various English proficiency levels were trained with novel L2 words during a reading task. In contrast to higher proficient learners, those with lower L2 proficiency exhibited increased effects of length, frequency, and lexicality across exposures and at-chance recognition of trained words. Importantly, an additional post-training task assessing the lexical integration of trained words evidenced the engagement in different L1–L2 reading strategies across different levels of L2 proficiency, hence suggesting the L1 holistic processing at the base of the effortful establishment of L2 orthographic representations shown by lower-proficient learners. Overall, these findings indicate the role of L2 proficiency in the influence that cross-linguistic variation exerts on L2 orthographic learning and highlight the need for English education programmes to tackle specific grapheme-to-phoneme skills in non-alphabetic target communities.

Funder

Regional Government of the Canary Islands

ministerio de ciencia e innovacion

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Physiology (medical),General Psychology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,General Medicine,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology,Physiology

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