The Development of English and Spanish Among Children in Immigrant Families in the United States.

Erika Hoff, David Giguere, Jamie Quinn, Justin Lauro
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Abstract

The variable language skills of children from immigrant families create challenges for families, teachers, and policy makers. A first step toward meeting those challenges is to understand the factors that influence language development in children who hear a language other than the country's majority language at home. We present findings from analyses of longitudinal data on children in immigrant families in the United States that contribute to that understanding. Our findings support four broad conclusions: (1) Children who are exposed to two languages simultaneously will lag behind monolingual children in their rates of single language growth. This is the normal result of distributed language exposure. (2) Language exposure provided by native speakers is more supportive of language growth than exposure provided by nonnative speakers. Therefore, immigrant parents should be encouraged to interact with their children in the language that allows the richest, most meaningful conversations, not necessarily in the majority language. (3) Preschool attendance does not always provide support for majority language skill. Attention needs to be paid to the quality of language support provided in preschool classrooms if they are to benefit language growth. (4) Acquiring the heritage language does not interfere with acquiring the majority language. Rather, it is heritage language acquisition that is vulnerable.

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美国移民家庭儿童英语和西班牙语的发展。
移民家庭儿童的语言技能参差不齐,这给家庭、教师和政策制定者带来了挑战。应对这些挑战的第一步是了解影响儿童语言发展的因素,这些儿童在家里听到的语言不是该国的主流语言。我们介绍了对美国移民家庭儿童纵向数据的分析结果,这些数据有助于理解这一点。我们的研究结果支持了四个广泛的结论:(1)同时接触两种语言的儿童在单语言生长率方面会落后于单语儿童。这是分布式语言暴露的正常结果。(2) 与非母语者相比,母语者提供的语言接触更支持语言发展。因此,应该鼓励移民父母用能进行最丰富、最有意义的对话的语言与孩子互动,而不一定是用多数语言。(3) 学前教育并不总是为大多数语言技能提供支持。如果要促进语言发展,就需要注意学前课堂提供的语言支持的质量。(4) 获得传统语言并不妨碍获得多数语言。相反,易受伤害的是传统语言习得。
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The Development of English and Spanish Among Children in Immigrant Families in the United States.
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