Assessing Language Development in Bilingual Preschool Children Part II: Language Development in Bilingual Children
Assessing Language Development in Bilingual Preschool Children Part II: Language Development in Bilingual Children
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Stages of Development
1. First, the child uses the home language. When everyone around the
child is speaking a different language, there are only two options-to speak
the language they already know, or to stop speaking entirely. Many
children, but not all, follow the first option for some period of time (Saville-
Troike, 1987). This of course leads to increasing frustration, and eventually
children give up trying to make others understand their language.
2. The second stage is the nonverbal period. After children abandon the
attempt to communicate in their first language, they enter a period in which
they do not talk at all. This can last for some time, or it can be a brief
phase. Although they do not talk during this time, children attempt to
communicate nonverbally to get help from adults or to obtain objects.
Furthermore, this is a period during which children begin actively to crack
the code of the second language. Saville-Troike (1987) noted that children
will rehearse the target language by repeating what other speakers say in a
low voice and by playing with the sounds of the new language.
3. The next stage occurs when the child is ready to go public with the new
language. There are two characteristics to this speech-it is telegraphic and
it involves the use of formulas. Telegraphic speech is common in early
monolingual language development and involves the use of a few content
words without function words or morphological markers. For example, a
young child learning to speak English may say "put paper" to convey the
meaning, "I want to put the paper on the table." Formulaic speech refers to
the use of unanalyzed chunks of words or routine phrases that are
repetitions of what the child hears. Children use such prefabricated chunks
long before they have any understanding of what they mean (Wong
Fillmore, 1976).
Furthermore, there are vast individual differences with respect to the rate at
which children pass through the different stages. Some children go through
a prolonged nonverbal stage, sometimes lasting for a year or more,
whereas other children pass through this stage so quickly they seem to
have rejected this strategy altogether. Nora, in Wong Fillmore's (1976)
study, preferred to interact with English-speaking children and used every
opportunity to engage in meaningful conversation in that language. Other
learners in the same study chose to speak almost entirely with other
children who understood their first language and so made little progress in
the second language.
Language Mixing
FIGURE 1
Semilingualism as a function of declining proficiency in the first language
and less than adequate proficiency in the second
(Note: Due to the constraints of the electronic environment Figure 1 has
been omitted.)
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