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Showing 1 to 15 of 73 results Save | Export
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Catrina Cuina Liu; Kevin Kien Hoa Chung – Journal of Research in Reading, 2025
Background: The associations between the characteristics of the home literacy environment (HLE) and children's language and literacy skills have been established in first languages. This study investigated the longitudinal interplay between the father-child and mother-child HLE and children's English language skills as L2. Methods: In this study,…
Descriptors: Children, Fathers, Mothers, Literacy
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Rachel Boit; Savannah Bayer; Joy Birabwa; Linda Hestenes; Mauri Mckoy; Amanda Eastern – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
Shared book reading at home is a beneficial language and literacy learning experience for young children. While there has been extensive research on shared book reading in general, more is needed on understanding what this looks like for multilingual refugee families and their preschool children, particularly among Burmese families in the United…
Descriptors: Parent Role, Mothers, Reading Strategies, Young Children
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Sim, Jasper Hong; Post, Brechtje – Journal of Child Language, 2022
This study examines the effects of input quality on early phonological acquisition by investigating whether interadult variation in specific phonetic properties in the input is reflected in the production of their children. We analysed the English coda stop release patterns in the spontaneous speech of fourteen mothers and compared them with the…
Descriptors: Phonology, Language Acquisition, Foreign Countries, Mothers
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Barnes, Amanda C.; Boit, Rachel J.; Conlin, Dana; Hestenes, Linda L. – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2022
Interactive book reading is an active practice that aims to stimulate children's language and literacy development. The interactions that take place during book reading are essential to understand; however, there is limited research on the practice of interactive book reading within refugee families. This qualitative study utilized observation and…
Descriptors: Refugees, Preschool Children, Emergent Literacy, Mothers
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Ali Soyoof – Interactive Learning Environments, 2024
Research has shown that the home digital literacy practices of children are shaped based on their parents' mediation strategies. While there is extensive literature on parental mediation strategies for children's digital media use as well as first language learning, this line of inquiry is not extensively explored in the context of second language…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mothers, Parent Role, Teaching Methods
Brenda Garcia Castro – ProQuest LLC, 2024
International immigration creates economic, demographic, and cultural shifts worldwide. The process of migration entails steps beginning from the decision to migrate, the migration journey and experiences upon arrival to the host country. Factors such as age at time of migration, traditions, and beliefs of those who migrate inform various aspects…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Barriers, Stress Variables, Mothers
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Hyonsuk Cho; Tanya Christ; Yu Liu – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2024
The goals of this paper were to: (a) recognize the funds of identity that five emergent bilingual mother-child dyads express while making personal connections to culturally relevant books, (b) identify whether each dyad's responses were convergent or divergent, and (c) explore how these discussions expanded participants' views of one another or…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Parent Child Relationship, Self Concept, Cultural Background
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Ali Soyoof; Barry Lee Reynolds; Michelle M. Neumann; Boris Vazquez-Calvo – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
Previous research has acknowledged that informal digital learning of English (IDLE) between parents and children can play an important role in children's first and second language (L1 and L2) learning. However, most previous parent-child studies have been conducted in Western countries where English is the child's first language. This study aimed…
Descriptors: Mothers, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Foreign Countries, Parents as Teachers
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Park, Eun Kyong; Vass, Gregory; Davison, Chris – Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 2022
The influential role of parents has long been acknowledged as a key contributor to children's bilingual development. Parents' home-based informal efforts to foster children's bilingual abilities are described as family language policies (FLPs). The important connection between bilingualism and FLP has been established, but to date there are few…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mothers, Immigrants, Bilingualism
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Reem A. Al-Samiri – International Multilingual Research Journal, 2024
This case study delves into the experiences of three Saudi mothers living in the United States, exploring their evolving understanding of their children's language needs and the obstacles they face as learners of Arabic heritage language (AHL). The study is rooted in the notion of language as a form of capital and Bonny Norton's metaphor of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Arabic, Native Language, Arabs
Daniela Avelar – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Parents play a crucial role in shaping children's emergent literacy through shared book reading. Shared book reading can foster literacy acquisition, promote vocabulary development, and improve print awareness, phonological awareness, and story comprehension (e.g., Bus et al., 1995; De Temple & Snow, 2003; Mol et al., 2008; Snow et al., 1998).…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Family Literacy, Emergent Literacy, Story Reading
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Barak, Lara; Degani, Tamar; Novogrodsky, Rama – Developmental Psychology, 2022
Previous studies found that bilingual children and adults with typical language development (TLD) perform better than monolinguals in novel word learning, but show lower scores on lexical retrieval tasks (e.g., naming known words). Children with developmental language disorder (DLD) lack in their abilities in both tasks compared with children with…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Developmental Delays, Language Impairments, Correlation
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Haoyan Ge; Albert Kwing Lok Lee; Hoi Kwan Yuen; Fang Liu; Virginia Yip – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2024
This study investigated bilingualism effects on the production of focus in 5- to 9-year-old Cantonese-English bilingual autistic children's L1 Cantonese, compared to their monolingual autistic peers as well as monolingual and bilingual typically developing children matched in nonverbal IQ, working memory, receptive vocabulary and maternal…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Bilingualism, Native Language, Second Language Learning
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Baker, Claire E. – Journal of Early Childhood Research, 2018
This study used a family-centered ecological lens to examine predictive relations among fathers' and mothers' language acculturation, parenting practices, and academic readiness in a large sample of Mexican American children in preschool (N = 880). In line with prior early childhood research, parent language acculturation was operationalized as…
Descriptors: Mothers, Fathers, Acculturation, Parenting Styles
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Sun, He; Low, Jiamin; Chua, Ivy – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2023
'Should I talk to my child in a language that I am not good at?' This question reveals the dilemma that many bilingual parents are facing. In the current study, 301 English-Mandarin bilinguals' mothers in Singapore self-evaluated their Mandarin proficiency and we assessed the 4-5 years old children's Mandarin receptive vocabulary and grammar. We…
Descriptors: Mothers, Native Language, Vocabulary Development, Grammar
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