Are you Dyslexic... in Chinese?

tvan
May 14, 2008, 09:44 PM posted in General Discussion

I just ran across a web site (http://www.lsesnet.com/blog/?p=63) describing the symptoms of dyslexia in the Chinese language.  They are as follows:

1.  Confusion with similar looking Chinese characters;

2.  difficulty in understanding that the same Chinese character can have multiple meanings;

3.  inability to comprehend that different characters may have the same pronunciation, but different tones and/or the same pronunciation, but different meanings.

4.  reversal problems with writing Chinese , i.e. difficulty in reading Chinese radicals vertically or horizontally; and

5.  problems in the proper sequences of strokes when writing Chinese characters.

Based on the above, I have come to the realization that, if I'm not dyslexic (in Chinese), I certainly suffer from all of the symptoms. 

BTW, the solution involves learning Chinese at a young age (too late!), using pinyin (like that helps), studying character morphology (uuuhhhh), and/or writing one gadzillion characters per day (my Chinese teacher's favored solution).  

 Is there anybody else on this site suffering the above symptoms... do you have additional symptoms to add... or is it just me?

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wolson
May 14, 2008, 09:51 PM

I thought this was just normal when learning Chinese!

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kimiik
May 15, 2008, 03:50 PM

People Dyslexic in Chinese have also a bad memory for faces (in french globish it's called bad physionomist). There're different levels : - do I know this person ? - what's the name of this person ? - from the name can I recall the face of this person ? - can I draw this visage from memory ?

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tvan
May 14, 2008, 11:37 PM

calkins, wolson, it's OK. The first step on the road to recovery is to to admit that you have a problem. Of course, I've been admitting the above for quite a while. I'm waiting expectantly to learn the next step.

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changye
May 15, 2008, 02:26 AM

Hi tvan, I’m a native Japanese, therefore I basically don’t have difficulty to memorize the "shapes" of simplified Chinese characters. And for this reason, I always think highly of you guys who learn Chinese from scratch, which I really think is a challenge to your memory power. If I were you, I would soon give it up. Now please let me give you some tips. Firstly, unless you would like to be a professional translator or a researcher, I don’t recommend you try to become able to write all the characters you have learned. What you need to do first is to memorize all the radicals and master a few hundred “basic” Chinese characters. Secondly, you don’t have to worry about “the proper sequences of strokes”. There is only one rule for that, i.e. from the top to the bottom, and from left to right. Anyway, sometimes there are a few different sequences for one character, and even educated natives usually don’t much care about precise stroke orders. Lastly, and fortunately, Chinese grammar is very easy to learn compared to some European languages, such as German, French, and Finnish. I guarantee that you would be able to make very fast progress in learning Chinese, once you have mastered a certain number of characters and phrases. Good luck.

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auntie68
May 15, 2008, 03:11 AM

Hello changye. At last, a post from you. Whee!! I almost regret telling you about KoreanClass101... how many KC101 lessons do you listen to each day? Please be honest with me...

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tvan
May 15, 2008, 03:36 AM

Changye, Thanks for the encouragement. Actually, I am hard at work at the only foreign (for me) language that has ever truly interested me. However, when I read the purported symptoms of "Chinese Dyslexia", I couldn't resist posting them here. Any offense to serious students of the language and/or people with actual dyslexia was purely accidental/coincidental/deliberate. Yo, Auntie68. You hijacking my thread? ;) BTW, did you notice that the web site cited above originated in your beautiful city? Changye, on stroke order, I've often wondered if that mattered more in calligraphy than casual writing.

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changye
May 15, 2008, 03:41 AM

Hi auntie68, Owing to you, I’m enjoying listening to a few beginner (1 and 2) lessons of Koreanclass a day recently. The way the hosts talk is really entertaining and friendly. Thanks!

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auntie68
May 15, 2008, 04:21 AM

Eek, sorry, tvan, for the mild hi-jack. Thanks for the "softening" ;-)... Thanks for drawing my attention to that web page's Singaporean origins. I've heard a few of those names before, and believe they are well-respected. "Chinese dyslexia" is a hotly-dispute hot topic in SIngapore at the moment. Some use the term ironically, some (mainly the educational psychologists and trained counsellors) think that the stunning rise in diagnoses of "Chinese dyslexia" may point to something deeper than the fact that Singaporeans are finding it more and more difficult to maintain -- let alone to transmit to their children -- any sort of Mandarin proficiency. In recent years, the number of "English-dyslexia" cases recognized by our Ministry of Education has risen so quickly that they've assigned a "Special Needs" counsellor to every school! And because that's not nearly enough, the plan is for 10% of all the teachers to receive some kind of very basic certification in detecting dyslexia, autism, and ADD, as well in helping kids with very mild cases stay in school. It's mind-boggling; in this context, "Chinese dyslexia" is something which we haven't even begun to explore properly yet.

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AuntySue
May 15, 2008, 08:20 AM

That's an interesting attempt at a definition. When you think about it, all of those listed difficulties occur in English speaking learners of English, but we generally classify those listed reading problems outside of "dyslexia" which is rather more specific. Maybe they are calling all reading problems faced by Chinese children (etc) dyslexia. It's a bit puzzling to my pedantic mind.

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tvan
May 15, 2008, 10:52 AM

Auntie68, if I recall correctly (I was once corrected on the subject), Singapore has four or five "official" languages with English more or less the lingua franca. Is every Singaporean child taught at least two languages? At a state school? AuntieSue, I'm with you on the above definition. It seems to fall in the category of using a true problem (dyslexia) as an excuse.

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calkins
May 14, 2008, 10:18 PM

Hey Walt, I think the Chinese learning has fried the gears in your brain;) They're not moving in your avatar anymore. I think Chinese has done the same to my brain! I definitely experience all of these symptoms. The biggest being that I mix up similar-looking characters.

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changye
May 15, 2008, 11:59 AM

Hi tvan, I remember that a brush calligraphy teacher at primary school once told me, about forty years ago, that I had to follow the correct stroke order so that I could write characters “beautifully”, but I believe that even a professional calligrapher actually often writes the way he wants, much less laymen! There are two things I forgot to mention in the above post. How to write in the correct stroke order is not so important, at least you shouldn’t be overly bothered by that, but how to accurately count the number of strokes is important, otherwise you can’t look up a word in a dictionary quickly. More importantly, you need to be proficient in finding the target character based on its radical, as early as possible, and it is not always easy even for native speakers. For example, which radical do you use when finding “舒” (shu1) in your dictionary? And what is the numbers of strokes of 凹 and 凸?

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wolson
May 15, 2008, 01:21 PM

Not certain why my brain has stopped processing! Could have been this project that I working on for research ... it has been a political nightmare and has caused me a few sleepless nights ... I wished it were Chinese that was frying my brain ... at least then I would be flash-fried! :) Ivan, everyone begins by trying to memorize characters ... it is ok for short term memory but for long term memory, it does not do the job. What I find works best is if I write the character a few times (using the rules for writing characters!) and then using the character in a couple of sentences. I no longer overtly try to memorize a character but rather try to become familiar with it like I would a new friend. A great aide that I have found in is the "A Chinese-English Dictionary, A Basic Dictionary for CHinese Language Learning" published by the Foreign Language Press for sentences on how a word is used. I purchased this one that I have in Beijing and it has literally opened my eys on some usages. Another useful dictionary is " Cheng & Tsui Chinese Character Dictionary: A Guide to the 2,000 Most Frequently-Used Characters" published by Cheng & Tsui. This one has has large characters with individual stroke orders for writing the characters.

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dennisliehappo
May 15, 2008, 01:27 PM

Trust me Tvan, you're NOT dyslexic. I know this because a schoolmate of mine had Character Dyslexia and therefore he eventually had to stop with his study Chinese. He could say everything in Chinese. He could understand everything in Chinese. He knew all the grammar. He could read every text if it was written in Pinyin and all that he heard in Chinese he could write down in Pinyin. But he couldn't learn the Chinese Characters and to pass the exams he had use the Characters, so he had to quite his study.

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auntie68
May 15, 2008, 01:45 PM

Hi again. Wolson, I wish I were disciplined enough to write out new characters a few times! I find that a good way (for me) to retain and internalize new Chinese characters, is to develop the habit of manually looking up a proportion of them in a traditional print dictionary. Say, 20 - 25% of the new characters I come across? I suspect that those few seconds spent guessing a character's pronunciation based on its elements, and then looking it up alphabetically (or failing which, counting the strokes etc), are a great way to "fix" the character for me. It's as if the process of deconstructing the character does something useful. Not only that, I also like to let my eyes wander briefly to the entries in the immediate vicinity of my "target" character. Since they are likely to be homonyms, it's like a subconscious tutorial on the way meaning and sound work together with each other in characters. Just my 2 cents worth!

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tvan
May 15, 2008, 02:27 PM

Auntie68, I'm with you on looking up characters in a print dictionary both as a learning stratagem as well as, well, finding out what a word means. What I need to do now is follow Changye's advice and memorize all the radicals in order so that I can bypass the radical index. dennisliehappo, interesting... so there really is such a thing as Chinese dyslexia. How was your friend's English? I'm asking because of some recent articles suggesting that people dyslexic in a English function well in Chinese. I wonder if the reverse is true?

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dennisliehappo
May 15, 2008, 02:46 PM

He is Duttch. HIs Dutch and English are fine. He only has Character Dyslexia, so he can't learn Chinese and Japanese using 漢字. Chinese who have Character Dyslexia can function well in English. But Chinese and Non-Chinese who both dyslexic and Character Dyslexic can function well in both English and Chinese.

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dennisliehappo
May 15, 2008, 02:49 PM

Now i am becoming dyslexic The last sentence must be thet they cannot function well in both languages

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auntie68
May 15, 2008, 03:10 PM

Hi tvan, memorizing the radical order is a big deal! If it helps, my experience is that you don't need to look everything up so formally; even the mere exercise of guessing the sound of the character and trying to find it by hanyu pinyin is a useful exercise (because you're taking an analytical look at the components of the character, even if only for a few seconds). I've just read dennisliehappo's post, and would like to share that my student, a 12-year-old family friend whose parents are both foreign (Italian Dad, Japanese Mum), seems to have no problems whatsoever with Chinese characters -- or with speaking Mandarin -- but she seems to have a learning disability where hanyu pinyin is concerned. I am not a qualified teacher, nor am I even very good at Mandarin, but I am reaching the view that she may have a genuine learning disability. Her problems with hanyu pinyin are keeping her Chinese grades in the "fail" zone because her ability to acquire new vocab depends on her being able to hear somebody say it, and then memorizing what she heard. My student is not "taking the piss". In fact, she's incredibly hardworking and determined. I know this because she was consistently failing most of her school subjects last year, but after only three months of intensive coaching, she and I got her grades up to an "A" for English, and nothing less than a "C" for the other two subjects. We didn't do Mandarin then because her mother had applied for a temporary waiver of the 2nd Language subject requirement in order to let her concentrate on passing the Primary School Leaving Exam (PSLE). Granted, I know that she has some emotional issues, but this morning I asked her mother (gulp!) to consider seeking the advice of an educational psychologist. In brief, I would say that there's nothing "slow" about my student, but she can't seem to process information in any meaningful sort of way. Eg. she can read an English text silently first, and then read it aloud for me -- with appropriate expression, and obvious understanding and enjoyment --, yet she wouldn't be able to answer any questions based on the text. We worked on this for two full months last year before she was able to score 20/25 consistently on the standard "comprehension" tests for her level (rather than 3 or 4/25). So I know she can do it, but it costs her so much effort that I think there may be a problem. Her spoken English is very fluent and correct. So is her written English, when she's doing "free composition" (in fact, it's well-structured), but she can't seem to get anything useful out of anything she reads. Chinese seems to be better for her, but she is failing that subject because there's virtually zero overlap between her reading, speaking, and writing ability in that language (just like it was in English, before we fixed that). My gut feeling is that my student has an undiagnosed learning problem, connected with reading, which can be a severe disability depending on the subject. She's amiable and disciplined enough to be a class monitor, but this makes it difficult for her teachers to see a problem. I don't get it. When I first began teaching her, in July 2007, she was nearly illiterate in English because she couldn't spell at all, and her vocabulary was very, very small. But she wasn't mixing letters up; it's just that she seemed to be unable to size up words and learn how to spell them. Tvan, sorry for hijacking your thread for a second time in one day!

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auntie68
May 15, 2008, 11:01 AM

Hi tvan. In our school system, every subject is taught in English, except for the... "mother tongue", which is arbitrarily assigned based on race. Yuck. For 75% of young Singaporeans, this means studying a strange subject called "Chinese as a Second Language" (or "CL2"), or something slightly more challenging known as "Higher Chinese". But it's only one subject. A small number apply for, and receive, official permission to do Chinese at a lower level, the "B"-syllabus Chinese. I totally agree with you and AuntySue about the strange treatment of dyslexia on that website. My layman's understanding of dyslexia tells me that "trying to read to your child at an early age" has no effect whatsoever on true dyslexia. The only explanation I can give is that we are feeling so overwhelmed at this moment with clinical medical diagnoses of autism and dyslexia and HDD, that we don't spend a lot of time exploring the notion of "Chinese dyslexia" properly...