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E-grāmata: Typical and Atypical Language Development in Cultural and Linguistic Diversity

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Typical and Atypical Language Development in Cultural and Linguistic Diversity brings together state-of-the-art studies in both typical and atypical language development.

Placing the topic in the context of cultural and linguistic diversity (CALD), the book offers readers serious theoretical consideration of the topic and provides implications for multilingual educational and clinical practices. The content covers a wide range of topics related to multilingual language development in CALD: typical and atypical language development in CALD, and the interface between both; the relationship between multilingual competence and academic performance in CALD; providing unbiased speech and language measures in CALD; and heritage and minority languages education in CALD. Each chapter outlines the core theoretical and practical issues and explores both theoretical and pedagogical/clinical implications in the area and possible future developments.

This volume is an essential resource for all those who study, research, or are interested in multilingual development, educational linguistics, and clinical linguistics in the CALD context.



Placing the topic in the context of cultural and linguistic diversity (CALD), the book offers readers serious theoretical consideration of the topic and provides implications to the multilingual educational and clinical practices.
Introduction.
1. Early bilingual acquisition: The effects of home
language typology on learning English inflectional morphology.
2. The role of
lexical tones in bilingual language processing: evidence from a typing task.
3. Beyond relative clauses: The development of noun-modifying clause
constructions in Cantonese.
4. Is object relative clause comprehension
particularly sensitive to quantity of language exposure in sequential
bilingual children?.
5. Language acquisition at the syntax-semantics
interface: Definiteness restrictions in L2 French and L3 English.
6.
Acquisition of definiteness marking in L2 Mandarin Chinese by English native
speakers: A perspective from syntax-pragmatics interface.
7. A longitudinal
exploration of the presence of a bilingual advantage in children.
8.
Associations among oral narrative language measures for Indigenous and
non-Indigenous Australian children in their first year of school.
9.
Grammatical profiles of Mandarin-English bilingual children at risk for
developmental language disorder.
10. Bidialectal CALD learners of English:
Implications on bilingual language disorders and differential diagnosis.
11.
Heritage language status, use and maintenance in culturally and
linguistically diverse contexts.
12. The development and pilot of a dynamic
assessment of word learning skills. Index
Weifeng Han is a Senior Lecturer in Speech Pathology, Institute of Health and Well-being, Federation University, Australia.

Chris Brebner is a Professor in Speech Pathology and is Pro-Vice Chancellor (Curriculum Impact) at Flinders University, Australia.