Literacy development in elementary school second-language learners

D. August, C. Snow, M. Carlo, C. P. Proctor, San De, Elisabeth Duursma, A. Szuber

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

28 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

This article describes a series of studies that examine the development of literacy in elementary school Spanish-speaking second-language learners. Findings from the research that addresses our first questionĀ" regarding cross-language relationshipsĀ"indicate that first-language reading skills are related to second-language reading skills, but that children must have first-language literacy in the skill for this relationship to exist; oral proficiency in the first language is not sufficient. In our studies that address the second research questionsĀ" bilinguals' early literacy development in kindergarten and first gradeĀ"Spanish-instructed bilinguals were more likely than English-instructed bilinguals or English monolinguals to treat diphthongs as 2 units, reflecting the influence of Spanish language instruction on English phonological analysis. Moreover, both English vocabulary and literacy instruction made unique, positive contributions to English spelling, whereas Spanish literacy instruction played a more important role than Spanish vocabulary in the production of Spanish-influenced spelling in English. Only bilingual students in Spanish literacy instruction exhibited Spanish-influenced spelling, indicating a powerful effect of language of literacy instruction. Our findings related to the third questionĀ"the role of home literacy and language environment on bilinguals' English and Spanish vocabulary developmentĀ"suggest that becoming or staying proficient in English does not require parental use of English in the home. Spanish, not English, is the at-risk language for children of Hispanic heritage living in the United States. Students need early instruction in Spanish and home support in that language to become and remain proficient in Spanish.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)351-364
Number of pages14
JournalTopics in Language Disorders
Volume26
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2006

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