Phonological awareness, literacy, and biligualism

<p>This thesis examines phonological awareness and literacy in monolingual and bilingual children.</p><p>Experiment 1 shows that 5-6 year old Spanish-monolingual, English-monolingual and Spanish-English-bilingual children show the same pattern of development of phonological awarene...

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Main Authors: Smith, H, Baños Smith, Helen
Other Authors: Bryant, P
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2000
Subjects:
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author Smith, H
Baños Smith, Helen
author2 Bryant, P
author_facet Bryant, P
Smith, H
Baños Smith, Helen
author_sort Smith, H
collection OXFORD
description <p>This thesis examines phonological awareness and literacy in monolingual and bilingual children.</p><p>Experiment 1 shows that 5-6 year old Spanish-monolingual, English-monolingual and Spanish-English-bilingual children show the same pattern of development of phonological awareness. However, the degree of awareness of each unit is influenced by linguistic background. Spanish children are more aware of vowels and rimes than English children. English children are more aware of syllables than Spanish children. Bilingual children are more aware of syllables in Spanish than Spanish-monolinguals and more aware of vowels in English than English-monolinguals. Hence they show transfer of phonological awareness across languages. All three groups also show a different relationship between phonological awareness and reading.</p><p>Experiment 2 shows that bilinguals are more aware than English monolinguals of vowels that exist in both languages (tense-vowels). Moreover, this enhanced awareness extends to vowels that do not exist in Spanish (lax-vowels). It is concluded that exposure to two languages enhances analysis of phonology as well as encouraging transfer of awareness.</p><p>Experiment 2 also shows that Spanish-speakers read and spell vowels more accurately than English-speakers. Bilingual children read English vowels more accurately than English-monolinguals. This suggests they understand the orthographic representations of English vowels at least as well as monolinguals. However, they spell vowels less accurately. This may be because bilinguals misapply Spanish phoneme-to-graphemecorrespondences when spelling English vowels.</p><p>The English and Spanish vowel systems differ more than their consonant systems. Experiment 3 shows that sensitivity to the four consonant types (stops, fricatives, nasals and liquids) is similar, and correlates with reading ability, in all groups. This suggests that bilinguals may only transfer awareness between English and Spanish of units that are linguistically dissimilar in each.</p><p>Experiment 4 compared the awareness of the two consonants in word-medial double-consonants (e.g. the 'c' and 't' in mactan). Although only Spanish-speakers used syllable boundaries to analyse these consonants they made a similar number of errors to English-speakers. However, all groups used syllable boundaries to read and spell wordmedial double-consonants.</p><p>Collectively, these results suggest that differences in phonological and orthographic structure between languages encourage different approaches to the acquisition of literacy. Future research should investigate how these differences may be exploited to facilitate literacy acquisition in each group.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:c1ab0529-a771-4b9f-a6ee-bcbc24f2a11f2022-03-27T06:03:16ZPhonological awareness, literacy, and biligualismThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:c1ab0529-a771-4b9f-a6ee-bcbc24f2a11fBilingualism in childrenPhoneticsSpanishGreat BritainEnglishPolonsky Theses Digitisation Project2000Smith, HBaños Smith, HelenBryant, P<p>This thesis examines phonological awareness and literacy in monolingual and bilingual children.</p><p>Experiment 1 shows that 5-6 year old Spanish-monolingual, English-monolingual and Spanish-English-bilingual children show the same pattern of development of phonological awareness. However, the degree of awareness of each unit is influenced by linguistic background. Spanish children are more aware of vowels and rimes than English children. English children are more aware of syllables than Spanish children. Bilingual children are more aware of syllables in Spanish than Spanish-monolinguals and more aware of vowels in English than English-monolinguals. Hence they show transfer of phonological awareness across languages. All three groups also show a different relationship between phonological awareness and reading.</p><p>Experiment 2 shows that bilinguals are more aware than English monolinguals of vowels that exist in both languages (tense-vowels). Moreover, this enhanced awareness extends to vowels that do not exist in Spanish (lax-vowels). It is concluded that exposure to two languages enhances analysis of phonology as well as encouraging transfer of awareness.</p><p>Experiment 2 also shows that Spanish-speakers read and spell vowels more accurately than English-speakers. Bilingual children read English vowels more accurately than English-monolinguals. This suggests they understand the orthographic representations of English vowels at least as well as monolinguals. However, they spell vowels less accurately. This may be because bilinguals misapply Spanish phoneme-to-graphemecorrespondences when spelling English vowels.</p><p>The English and Spanish vowel systems differ more than their consonant systems. Experiment 3 shows that sensitivity to the four consonant types (stops, fricatives, nasals and liquids) is similar, and correlates with reading ability, in all groups. This suggests that bilinguals may only transfer awareness between English and Spanish of units that are linguistically dissimilar in each.</p><p>Experiment 4 compared the awareness of the two consonants in word-medial double-consonants (e.g. the 'c' and 't' in mactan). Although only Spanish-speakers used syllable boundaries to analyse these consonants they made a similar number of errors to English-speakers. However, all groups used syllable boundaries to read and spell wordmedial double-consonants.</p><p>Collectively, these results suggest that differences in phonological and orthographic structure between languages encourage different approaches to the acquisition of literacy. Future research should investigate how these differences may be exploited to facilitate literacy acquisition in each group.</p>
spellingShingle Bilingualism in children
Phonetics
Spanish
Great Britain
Smith, H
Baños Smith, Helen
Phonological awareness, literacy, and biligualism
title Phonological awareness, literacy, and biligualism
title_full Phonological awareness, literacy, and biligualism
title_fullStr Phonological awareness, literacy, and biligualism
title_full_unstemmed Phonological awareness, literacy, and biligualism
title_short Phonological awareness, literacy, and biligualism
title_sort phonological awareness literacy and biligualism
topic Bilingualism in children
Phonetics
Spanish
Great Britain
work_keys_str_mv AT smithh phonologicalawarenessliteracyandbiligualism
AT banossmithhelen phonologicalawarenessliteracyandbiligualism