The lexical basis of second language reading comprehension: From (sub-)lexical knowledge to processing efficiency
Alshehri, M G; Zhang, D
Date: 9 December 2021
Journal
Language Learning
Publisher
Wiley / Language Learning Research Club, University of Michigan
Publisher DOI
Abstract
This study compared how distinct lexical competences, including lexical knowledge as well as
processing skills at both word/lexical and sub-lexical/morphological levels, collectively and
relatively predict reading comprehension in adult learners of English as a Foreign Language
(EFL). Participants were 220 Arabic-speaking EFL learners ...
This study compared how distinct lexical competences, including lexical knowledge as well as
processing skills at both word/lexical and sub-lexical/morphological levels, collectively and
relatively predict reading comprehension in adult learners of English as a Foreign Language
(EFL). Participants were 220 Arabic-speaking EFL learners in a Saudi university. A battery of
paper- and computer-based tests was administered to measure the participants’ lexical
competences, reading comprehension ability, and working memory. Hierarchical regression
analyses revealed that over and above working memory, both lexical and sub-lexical knowledge
were significant and unique predictors of reading comprehension; and sub-lexical processing
efficiency, as opposed to lexical processing efficiency, predicted reading comprehension
significantly. Additionally, among the measured lexical competences, lexical knowledge was the
strongest predictor; and the two knowledge variables collectively had a far greater influence on
reading comprehension than the two processing efficiency variables. These findings are
discussed in light of the lexical basis of text comprehension.
School of Education
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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