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Bilingual language exposure is highly variable, with wide-ranging
influences on early language skills. This underscores the need for
understanding what to expect in early language acquisition so that
those with typical language development can be differentiated from
those who are struggling or at risk, and so requiring early
intervention. One of the key ways to look at language development
in very young children is to investigate their vocabulary
development, and for bilingual children, this means measuring their
abilities in both languages. This book takes an important step in
this direction: it documents the expressive vocabularies of
children aged 16-45 months who were exposed to different language
pairs and bilingual contexts, and investigates the risk and
protective effects of various environmental factors. In each of the
six studies, the vocabularies of typically-developing children were
measured using the vocabulary checklist of the MacArthur-Bates
Communicative Development Inventories and its adaptations to other
languages. Developmental and language background questionnaires
provided additional information on children's developmental
history, risk factors for language impairment, language exposure,
as well as parental education and occupation. This harmonised
methodology was designed within COST Action IS0804 (Language
Impairment in a Multilingual Society: Linguistic Patterns and the
Road to Assessment). The outcomes of this cross-linguistic research
contribute towards answering theoretical questions regarding early
bilingual vocabulary acquisition. They also have clinical
relevance, potentially assisting speech-language pathologists and
those interested in early language development in distinguishing
between clinically significant bilingual delays and the natural
consequences of bilingual exposure. This book was originally
published as a special issue of the International Journal of
Bilingual Education and Bilingualism.
Bilingual language exposure is highly variable, with wide-ranging
influences on early language skills. This underscores the need for
understanding what to expect in early language acquisition so that
those with typical language development can be differentiated from
those who are struggling or at risk, and so requiring early
intervention. One of the key ways to look at language development
in very young children is to investigate their vocabulary
development, and for bilingual children, this means measuring their
abilities in both languages. This book takes an important step in
this direction: it documents the expressive vocabularies of
children aged 16-45 months who were exposed to different language
pairs and bilingual contexts, and investigates the risk and
protective effects of various environmental factors. In each of the
six studies, the vocabularies of typically-developing children were
measured using the vocabulary checklist of the MacArthur-Bates
Communicative Development Inventories and its adaptations to other
languages. Developmental and language background questionnaires
provided additional information on children's developmental
history, risk factors for language impairment, language exposure,
as well as parental education and occupation. This harmonised
methodology was designed within COST Action IS0804 (Language
Impairment in a Multilingual Society: Linguistic Patterns and the
Road to Assessment). The outcomes of this cross-linguistic research
contribute towards answering theoretical questions regarding early
bilingual vocabulary acquisition. They also have clinical
relevance, potentially assisting speech-language pathologists and
those interested in early language development in distinguishing
between clinically significant bilingual delays and the natural
consequences of bilingual exposure. This book was originally
published as a special issue of the International Journal of
Bilingual Education and Bilingualism.
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