Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
352716 | Contemporary Educational Psychology | 2011 | 12 Pages |
We examined the importance of children’s achievement strategies in different literacy outcomes in three languages varying in orthographic consistency: Chinese, English, and Greek. Eighty Chinese-speaking Taiwanese children, 51 English-speaking Canadian children and 70 Greek children were assessed on measures of phonological awareness, rapid automatized naming, reading fluency, and spelling. The children’s use of a task-focused versus task-avoidant achievement strategy in the classroom context was rated by their teachers. The results indicated that the teacher-rated task-focused behavior was a significant predictor of spelling and to a lesser extent of reading fluency and that its effects were comparable across languages.
Research highlights► We examined the effects of achievement strategies on literacy across languages. ► Achievement strategies predicted significantly reading fluency and spelling. ► Orthography did not moderate the effect of achievement strategies. ► Achievement strategies predicted more strongly spelling than reading fluency.