posted on 2025-08-01, 11:17authored byS Ke, D Zhang
This scoping review explores the causal relationship between morphological instruction and
reading development in young L2 learners by synthesizing 12 primary studies published between
2004 and 2019 (N = 1,535). These studies focused on reading English as the target language and
involved participants between kindergarten and grade 12 from four countries (China, Egypt,
Singapore, and the United States). Findings suggested that (1) morphological instruction led to
consistent and positive gains in L2 children’s morphological awareness and vocabulary
knowledge, and the effect sizes (Cohen’s ds) ranged from small to large; (2) the relationship
between morphological instruction and other outcomes such as phonological awareness, word
reading accuracy, word reading fluency, spelling, and reading comprehension was inconclusive.
Notably, transfer effects of L2 English morphological instruction on novel word learning in
English or on reading development in an additional language were only examined and observed
in four primary studies. Discussion was provided regarding future instructional and research
design.
This is the final version. Available on open access from the Department of English Studies, Adam Mickiewicz University, Kalisz, Poland via the DOI in this record