Title: Challenging Beliefs About Multilingual Language Acquisition
1Challenging Beliefs About Multilingual Language
Acquisition
2Challenging beliefs about multilingual language
acquisition
- What do we believe about multilingual language
development? - Or
- Can that really be true?
3Who am I?
- Educational Psychologist
- 20 years in Paris
- 2 bilingual children
- 13 years at International School of Paris
- Learning support teacher
- Doctorate in Educational Psychology UCL
- Particularly interested in the development of
oral language for academic purposes in
multilingual children attending international
schools.
4Why do the Myths Persist?
- Facts about multilingual development are
counterintuitive - Recent impact of brain research
- Benefits of bilingual education questioned
- Lack of research on positive multilingual
experiences
(Tokuhama-Espinosa 2003)
5How is bilingualism represented in the brain?
- Common Underlying Proficiency
-
(Cummins 2000) - Common information processing
- Common concept formation
- Common understanding of literacy
6The Threshold Hypothesis
- Explains why some children do better than others
- Strong bilingualism advantageous
- Weak bilingualism can cause problems
- Importance of maintaining mother tongue
7Children learning through a language other than
their mother tongue take 1 to 2 years to develop
the language skills necessary to be academically
successful in class.
False !
8Language features
- 2 years surface features basic vocabulary,
phonetics, alphabet, conversational skills - Up to 7 years academic proficiency
Thomas and Collier 2002
9Children should learn to read first in their
native language rather than the language of
instruction
- Should read first in their strongest language
- Surface features e.g. phonological awareness,
knowledge about print, will transfer across
languages - Depends on language strategy and possibilities
- Reading is vital for development of academic
language
True
10Young children learn additional languages more
easily than older children or adults.
- Depends what we mean by easily
- Do it differently
- Adults can learn to speak a foreign language as
fast as a child but they have to overcome the
barriers of frequency and security to do so
(Tokuhmama-Espinosa 2003)
Not necessarily!
11Children who are learning through a language
other than their mother tongue should continue to
have instruction in their mother tongue
- To ensure the advantages of additive bilingualism
- Constant rich exposure to all languages
True
12Students should speak English in the classroom
when it is the language of instruction
- Learning language, learning through language,
- learning about language (IB Doc 2008)
-
- Elaborate conceptual understanding, extend
comprehension - Emotional unwell, sad, frustrated, angry
- Definition when translating for others
- Clarification tasks or instructions
- (ESL in the mainstream 2008)
except
Yes
13Teachers should respond to childrens errors by
correctly rephrasing what they have said rather
than explicitly pointing out the errors.
Not necessarily
- Adults interpret it as corrective feedback.
- Children interpret rephrasing as a recast or
confirmation of meaning. - I understand what you are saying but Im
showing you how to say it better.
14Children with SEN can not benefit from bilingual
education
- Depends on the special need
- Language delay will be extended
- Bilingualism enhances intellectual development
- Bilingualism can not always be avoided
Depends
15Thank you!
- Jfeinmann_at_gmail.com
- Jenny Feinmann
16References
- Baker, C. (2006). Foundations of bilingual
education and bilingualism. (4th ed.).
Multilingual Matters Ltd. Clevedon U.K. - Carder, M.(2007). Bilingualism in International
schools. Clevedon Multilingual Matters. - Cummins (2000) Language, Power and Pedagogy,
Clevedon Multilingual Matters. - Genesee, F., Lindholm-Leary, K., Sanders, W.M.,
and Christian, D. (Eds.) (2006) Educating English
language learners a synthesis of research
evidence. Cambridge University Press New York - Gallagher, E. (2008) Equal rights to the
curriculum, Multilingual Matters, Clevedon, U.K. - International Baccalaureate (IB 2008a). Learning
in a language other than mother tongue in IB
programmes. - Thomas, W.P. and Collier, V.P. (2002). A national
study of school effectiveness for language
minority students long-term academic
achievement. Santa Cruz, CA Centre for research
of education, diversity and excellence,
University of California-Santa Cruz. - Tokuhama-Espinosa, T. (2003). Myths about
multilingualism. In T. Tokuhama-Espinosa, The
Multilingual mind Issues discussed by, for, and
about people living with many languages.
Portsmouth, Heinemann