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Dive into the research topics where Pui-sze Yeung is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Pui-sze Yeung.


Scientific Studies of Reading | 2011

Reading and Spelling Chinese among Beginning Readers: What Skills Make a Difference?.

Pui-sze Yeung; Connie Suk-Han Ho; Pakey Pui-man Chik; Lap-Yan Lo; Hui Luan; David Wai-ock Chan; Kevin K. H. Chung

The contributions of six important reading-related skills (phonological awareness, rapid naming, orthographic skills, morphological awareness, listening comprehension, and syntactic skills) to Chinese word and text reading were examined among 290 Chinese first graders in Hong Kong. Rapid naming, but not phonological awareness, was a significant predictor of Chinese word reading and writing to dictation (i.e., spelling) in the context of orthographic skills and morphological awareness. Commonality analyses suggested that orthographic skills and morphological awareness each contributed significant amount of unique variance to Chinese word reading and spelling. Syntactic skills accounted for significant amount of unique variance in reading comprehension at both sentence and passage levels after controlling for the effects of word reading and the other skills, but listening comprehension did not. A model on the interrelationships among the reading-related skills and Chinese reading at both word and text levels was proposed.


Applied Psycholinguistics | 2013

Longitudinal predictors of Chinese word reading and spelling among elementary grade students.

Pui-sze Yeung; Connie Suk-Han Ho; Yau-Kan Wong; David Wai-ock Chan; Kevin K. H. Chung; Lap-Yan Lo

The longitudinal predictive power of four important reading-related skills (phonological skills, rapid naming, orthographic skills, and morphological awareness) to Chinese word reading and writing to dictation (i.e., spelling) was examined in a 3-year longitudinal study among 251 Chinese elementary students. Rapid naming, orthographic skills, and morphological awareness assessed in Grade 1 were significant longitudinal predictors of Chinese word reading in Grades 1 to 4. As for word spelling, rapid naming was the only significant predictor across grades. Morphological awareness was a robust predictor of word spelling in Grade 1 only. Phonological skills and orthographic skills significantly predicted word spelling in Grades 2 and 4. After controlling for autoregressive effects, morphological awareness and orthographic skills were the significant longitudinal predictors of Chinese word reading and word spelling, respectively. These findings reflected the impacts of the Chinese orthography on childrens reading and spelling development.


Annals of Dyslexia | 2012

Contribution of discourse and morphosyntax skills to reading comprehension in Chinese dyslexic and typically developing children

Pakey Pui-man Chik; Connie Suk-Han Ho; Pui-sze Yeung; Yau-kai Wong; David Wai-ock Chan; Kevin K. H. Chung; Lap-Yan Lo

This study aimed at identifying important skills for reading comprehension in Chinese dyslexic children and their typically developing counterparts matched on age (CA controls) or reading level (RL controls). The children were assessed on Chinese reading comprehension, cognitive, and reading-related skills. Results showed that the dyslexic children performed significantly less well than the CA controls but similarly to RL controls in most measures. Results of multiple regression analyses showed that word-level reading-related skills like oral vocabulary and word semantics were found to be strong predictors of reading comprehension among typically developing junior graders and dyslexic readers of senior grades, whereas morphosyntax, a text-level skill, was most predictive for typically developing senior graders. It was concluded that discourse and morphosyntax skills are particularly important for reading comprehension in the non-inflectional and topic-prominent Chinese system.


Reading and Writing | 2013

Modeling the relationships between cognitive-linguistic skills and writing in Chinese among elementary grades students

Pui-sze Yeung; Connie Suk-Han Ho; David W. Chan; Kevin K. H. Chung

The present study is a four-year longitudinal study examining the important predictors of writing of 340 Chinese children in elementary grades. Children’s transcription skills (handwriting skills and spelling), and syntactic skills in grade 1 were significant predictors of text writing in grade 1–4 while ideation in grade 1 only contributed to text writing in grade 2. Stroke order knowledge was shown as an important handwriting skill in Chinese reflecting the characteristics of the Chinese orthography. A model of Chinese writing in early elementary grades was proposed. In the model, orthographic knowledge, morphological awareness and handwriting skills are proposed to contribute to spelling which is correlated with text writing. Handwriting skills, ideation, and syntactic skills were found to contribute to text writing. Path analysis results suggest that the longitudinal relationship between spelling and text writing is bidirectional.


Discourse Processes | 2013

Contribution of Oral Language Skills, Linguistic Skills, and Transcription Skills to Chinese Written Composition Among Fourth-Grade Students

Pui-sze Yeung; Connie Suk-Han Ho; David W. Chan; Kevin K. H. Chung

The present study aimed to investigate the contribution of oral language skills, linguistic skills, and transcription skills to Chinese written composition among Grade 4 students in Hong Kong. Measures assessing verbal working memory, oral language skills, linguistic skills (i.e., syntactic skills and discourse skills), transcription skills (i.e., spelling), and written composition were administered to Chinese fourth graders (N = 259). Hierarchical multiple regression results showed that only spelling and syntactic skills contributed significant unique variance to written composition. The relevance of the differences between the spoken Cantonese dialect and Modern Standard Written Chinese to these findings concerning the development of childrens written composition is explored.


Journal of Research in Reading | 2016

The role of stroke knowledge in reading and spelling in Chinese

Lap-Yan Lo; Pui-sze Yeung; Connie Suk-Han Ho; David Wai-ock Chan; Kevin K. H. Chung

The present study examined the types of orthographic knowledge that are important in learning to read and spell Chinese words in a 2-year longitudinal study following 289 Hong Kong Chinese children from Grade 1 to Grade 2. Multiple regression results showed that radical knowledge significantly predicted childrens word reading and spelling performance across the years. Stroke knowledge contributed both concurrently (Grade 1) and longitudinally (Grade 2) to childrens spelling performance after controlling for rapid naming, phonological awareness, morphological awareness and radical knowledge. These findings support the significance of radical knowledge in Chinese reading and spelling and the specific role of stroke order knowledge in Chinese spelling. The findings have implications for the design of an effective curriculum for teaching children to spell Chinese characters.


Applied Psycholinguistics | 2017

The role of transcription skills and oral language skills in Chinese writing among children in upper elementary grades

Pui-sze Yeung; Connie Suk-Han Ho; David W. Chan; Kevin K. H. Chung

This study examined the role of transcription skills (including spelling and handwriting fluency) and oral language skills in Chinese writing development among upper elementary grade students in Hong Kong. Measures assessing verbal working memory, spelling, handwriting fluency, oral narrative skills, syntactic skills, and written composition were administered to 97 students in Grade 4 (n = 47) and Grade 6 (n = 50). Hierarchical multiple regression results showed that spelling and oral narrative skills were unique predictors of Chinese writing performance. The significant interaction effect of grade and spelling showed that transcription skills played a more important role in Chinese writing performance among sixth graders than among fourth graders. Together, the present results provide important support for the “simple view of writing” model and underscore the importance of transcription skills and oral narrative skills in childrens writing development in Chinese.


Reading and Writing | 2012

Syntactic skills in sentence reading comprehension among Chinese elementary school children

Pakey Pui-man Chik; Connie Suk-Han Ho; Pui-sze Yeung; David Wai-ock Chan; Kevin K. H. Chung; Hui Luan; Lap-Yan Lo; Wendy Suet-yee Lau


Learning and Individual Differences | 2013

A model of reading comprehension in Chinese elementary school children

Pui-sze Yeung; Connie Suk-Han Ho; David W. Chan; Kevin K. H. Chung; Yau-kai Wong


Reading and Writing | 2012

The core components of reading instruction in Chinese

Connie Suk-Han Ho; Yau-kai Wong; Pui-sze Yeung; David W. Chan; Kevin K. H. Chung; Sau-Ching Lo; Hui Luan

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David W. Chan

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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David Wai-ock Chan

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Lap-Yan Lo

Hong Kong Shue Yan University

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Hui Luan

Hong Kong Baptist University

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Yau-kai Wong

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

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Pakey Pui-man Chik

Hong Kong Institute of Education

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Sau-Ching Lo

University of Hong Kong

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Yau-Kan Wong

University of Hong Kong

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