Linguistic consequences of toing and froing: Factors that modulate narrative development in bilingual returnee children
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23634Dato
2021-04-13Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
This longitudinal study examined the development of narrative micro- and
macrostructure in Japanese-English bilingual returnee children. Returnees
are children of immigrant families who move to a foreign country,
spending a significant portion of their formative developmental years in
the foreign majority language context before returning to their native
language environment. The returnees did a narrative task in both their L1
(Japanese) and L2 (English) immediately upon their return to their native
language environment and a year after. The results showed no aggregate
significant changes in L1 or L2 micro- and macrostructure over time.
However, at the individual level, the degree of maintenance of L2
microstructure was modulated by L2 exposure. That is, children who
continued to receive L2 exposure better maintained their English
microstructure (i.e. Type-Token Ratio and Verbs per Utterance) despite
being re-immersed in the L1 environment. In terms of their Japanese, the
age of return to the L1 environment and relative proficiency predicted
the development of their Japanese microstructure (i.e. MLU, Fluency,
Type-Token Ratio) and macrostructure. Our study is the first to track both
languages of bilingual returnee children over time, revealing that
different background variables affect the change in returnee children’s L1
and L2 narrative abilities.
Forlag
RouteledgeSitering
Kubota M, Chondrogianni, Clark, Rothman J. Linguistic consequences of toing and froing: Factors that modulate narrative development in bilingual returnee children. International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism. 2021Metadata
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