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Journal ArticleDOI

Parental language input patterns and children's bilingual use

Annick De Houwer
- 01 Jul 2007 - 
- Vol. 28, Iss: 3, pp 411-424
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TLDR
The authors found that the children in these families all spoke the majority language, but that minority language use was not universal, and that differences in parental language input patterns used at home correlated with differences in child minority language using.
Abstract
This article reports on a study that addresses the following question: why do some children exposed to two languages from early on fail to speak those two languages? Questionnaire data were collected in 1,899 families in which at least one of the parents spoke a language other than the majority language. Each questionnaire asked about the home language use of a family consisting of at least one parent and one child between the ages of 6 and 10 years old. The results show that the children in these families all spoke the majority language, but that minority language use was not universal. Differences in parental language input patterns used at home correlated with differences in child minority language use. Home input patterns where both parents used the minority language and where at most one parent spoke the majority language had a high chance of success. The “one parent–one language” strategy did not provide a necessary nor sufficient input condition. Implications for bilingual families are discussed.

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Citations
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Properties of dual language exposure that influence 2-year-olds' bilingual proficiency.

TL;DR: The mothers of 29 Spanish English bilingual 25-month-olds kept diary records of their children's dual language exposure and provided information on theirChildren's English and Spanish language development using the MacArthur-Bates inventories, finding that the number of different speakers from whom the children heard English and the percent of their English input that was provided by native speakers were unique sources of variance in children's English skills
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Family Language Policy

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The relationship between bilingual exposure and vocabulary development

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The home language environment of monolingual and bilingual children and their language proficiency

TL;DR: The authors investigated the relationship between home language learning activities and vocabulary in a sample of monolingual native Dutch and bilingual immigrant Moroccan-Dutch (n = 46) and Turkish-Turkish 3-year-olds, speaking Tarifit-Berber, a nonscripted language, and Turkish as their first language (L1), respectively.
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Invisible and visible language planning: ideological factors in the family language policy of Chinese immigrant families in Quebec

TL;DR: This paper examined how family languages policies are planned and developed in ten Chinese immigrant families in Quebec, Canada, with regard to their children's language and literacy education in three languages, Chinese, English, and French.
References
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TL;DR: The rates of speaking only English for a number of contemporary groups suggest that Anglicization is occurring at roughly the same pace for Asians as it did for Europeans, but is slower among the descendants of Spanish speakers.
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