Active bi- and trilingualism and its influencing factors
- Link:
- Autor/in:
- Erscheinungsjahr:
- 2020
- Medientyp:
- Text
- Schlagworte:
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- Bilingual Children
- Dual Language
- Monolingual
- Language
- Reading
- Semantics
- Bilingual Children
- Dual Language
- Monolingual
- Language
- Reading
- Semantics
- Active early child trilingualism
- size of (receptive) vocabulary
- minority/majority language
- quality of input
- amount of input
- Beschreibung:
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This article examines factors that promote active multilingualism. For this purpose, the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test was used with 48 children. Their results were linked to a parental questionnaire designed to evaluate the children’s linguistic input in their immediate environment. The study shows that, besides a minimum amount of linguistic input, the language constellation (i.e. presence/absence of the majority language at home) is also decisive. At the same time, it seems irrelevant for active bi- and trilingualism which family language policies are chosen (e.g. One person-One Language), as long as the promotion of the minority language does not only take place institutionally, but also at home. Overall, the results indicate that attending a bilingual kindergarten/school alone does not lead to active multilingualism. Family factors and family support seem to be decisive. These include the creation of a linguistically stimulating environment through cultural contact and the language constellation within the family.
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- Lizenz:
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- info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
- Quellsystem:
- Forschungsinformationssystem der UHH
Interne Metadaten
- Quelldatensatz
- oai:www.edit.fis.uni-hamburg.de:publications/864222f0-70f5-4871-b14e-8d3b8faae22c