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Bilingual Competence and Bilingual Proficiency in Child Development [Hardback]

(Northern Arizona University)
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When two or more languages are part of a child's world, we are presented with a rich opportunity to learn something about language in general and about how the mind works. In this book, Norbert Francis examines the development of bilingual proficiency and the different kinds of competence that come together in making up its component parts. In particular, he explores problems of language ability when children use two languages for tasks related to schooling, especially in learning how to read and write. He considers both broader research issues and findings from an ongoing investigation of child bilingualism in an indigenous language--speaking community in Mexico. This special sociolinguistic context allows for a unique perspective on some of the central themes of bilingualism research today, including the distinction between competence and proficiency, modularity, and the Poverty of Stimulus problem. Francis proposes that competence (knowledge) should be considered as an integral component of proficiency (ability) rather than something separate and apart, arguing that this approach allows for a more inclusive assessment of research findings from diverse fields of study. The bilingual indigenous language project illustrates how the concepts of modularity and the competence-proficiency distinction in particular might be applied to problems of language learning and literacy. Few investigations of indigenous language and culture approach bilingual research problems from a cognitive science perspective. By suggesting connections to broader cognitive and linguistic issues, Francis points the way to further research along these lines.

Preface ix
Acknowledgments xiii
Abbreviations xv
1 Introduction: The Problem of Language Acquisition When There Are Two
1(24)
1.1 Bilingual Proficiency and Bilingual Competence
3(7)
1.2 Knowledge That Outstrips Experience
10(1)
1.3 Modularity
11(5)
1.4 A Study of Indigenous-Language Bilingualism in Mexico
16(4)
1.5 Looking Ahead: Overview of the
Chapters
20(5)
2 Bilingualism in School
25(24)
2.1 When Second Language Learning Is Not Optional
27(2)
2.2 Bilingualism, Diglossia, and Literacy
29(4)
2.3 A Componential Approach to Language Ability Solves a Practical Problem in Second Language Learning
33(2)
2.4 New Democracy in South Africa: The Challenge of a Multilingual Language Policy
35(3)
2.5 A Possible Counterexample from North Africa
38(6)
2.6 Program Design Based on a Concept from Sociolinguistics
44(5)
3 The Debate on the Nature of Bilingual Proficiency: Distinguishing between Different Kinds of Language Ability
49(30)
3.1 First Language and Second Language in Literacy Learning
51(2)
3.2 Concepts of Bilingual Proficiency: Background to the Debate
53(3)
3.3 A Proposed Modification of Cummins's Model
56(5)
3.4 Literacy Learning at the San Isidro Bilingual School: A Follow-Up Study
61(2)
3.5 Comparing Results from Both Languages
63(5)
3.6 Using the New Model to Describe Different Kinds of Interdependence
68(8)
3.7 Components and Connections
76(3)
4 Componential Approaches to the Study of Language Proficiency
79(28)
4.1 Vygotsky and Luria: The Concept of "Inner Speech"
81(4)
4.2 Metacognition: Language at the Service of Higher-Order Thinking
85(3)
4.3 Compartmentalization of the Bilingual Mind
88(6)
4.4 Bilingualism as a Showcase for the Internal Diversity of Language Proficiency
94(7)
4.5 Advancing the Research Program on Bilingualism: The Need for Clarity and Reflection
101(6)
5 Research on the Components of Bilingual Proficiency
107(34)
5.1 Maximum Imbalance in Bilingualism
109(6)
5.2 Separation of the Linguistic Subsystems
115(3)
5.3 How Bilingual Speech Constitutes Evidence of Language Separation
118(6)
5.4 Contradictions of an Integrativist Approach
124(1)
5.5 A Bilingual Version of the Tripartite Parallel Architecture
125(7)
5.6 More Opportunities for Research on Uneven Development
132(9)
6 The Critical Period, Access to Universal Grammar in First and Second Language, and Language Attrition
141(36)
6.1 Overview of the
Chapter
142(2)
6.2 The Concept of Language Attrition
144(2)
6.3 What the Research Says about First Language Attrition
146(5)
6.4 The Critical Period Hypothesis
151(8)
6.5 Is Second Language Competence Universal Grammar-Constrained?
159(7)
6.6 Acquisition and Learning in the Second Language
166(5)
6.7 A Wider Discussion: Applying Concepts to New Research
171(6)
7 An Analysis of Academic Language Proficiency
177(26)
7.1 Secondary Discourse Ability + Metalinguistic Awareness
179(4)
7.2 The Development of Narrativization and Levels of Narrative Ability
183(4)
7.3 Language Development---Grammar
187(5)
7.4 Access to Shared Academic Proficiencies in Biliteracy
192(5)
7.5 Linking Secondary Discourse Ability and Metalinguistic Awareness at the Discourse, Sentence, and Word Levels
197(6)
8 Metalinguistic Awareness, Bilingualism, and Writing
203(28)
8.1 Metalinguistic Development and Bilingualism
204(2)
8.2 Metalinguistic Awareness in Literacy and Second Language Learning
206(1)
8.3 A Study of Children's Perceptions of Focus on Form
207(3)
8.4 Children's Development of a Reflective Posture toward Writing: Results from Spanish
210(3)
8.5 Metalinguistic Awareness as a Component of Literacy Ability---Writing in Particular
213(4)
8.6 Possible Implications for Teaching Writing Skills
217(1)
8.7 Children's Development of a Reflective Posture toward Writing: Results from Nahuatl
218(2)
8.8 The Revision/Correction Assessment in Nahuatl
220(2)
8.9 A Comparison of Performance between the Languages
222(1)
8.10 Internal Resources and External Factors
223(4)
8.11 Applying Different Kinds of Knowledge in Literacy Development
227(4)
9 Metalinguistic Awareness, Bilingualism, and Reading
231(22)
9.1 Modular Approaches to the Study of Reading
232(2)
9.2 A Study of Focus on Form in Reading
234(3)
9.3 The Development of a Reflective Posture toward Reading Comprehension
237(3)
9.4 One Way in Which Children Learn to Use Context Strategically
240(4)
9.5 Future Research on Literacy Learning, Metalinguistic Awareness, and Bilingualism
244(3)
9.6 Does the Use of Context Contradict Modularity in Reading?
247(6)
10 Conclusion: Results and Prospects
253(28)
10.1 Parts to Whole: What's Natural and What's Unnatural in Language Learning?
254(12)
10.2 Versions of Modularity and Pending Questions in Bilingual Research
266(9)
10.3 Language Diversity, Cognition, and Culture
275(6)
Appendix 1 Assessment of Metalinguistic Awareness Related to Bilingualism 281(8)
Appendix 2 Indices of Additive Bilingualism 289(6)
Appendix 3 Early Childhood Borrowing and Codeswitching 295(12)
Appendix 4 Writing Samples, including the Assessment of Revision/Correction 307(6)
Glossary 313(12)
Notes 325(18)
References 343(40)
Index 383