Literature DB >> 1505238

Measuring bilingual children's receptive vocabularies.

V M Umbel1, B Z Pearson, M C Fernández, D K Oller.   

Abstract

Receptive vocabulary of Hispanic children in Miami was tested in both English and Spanish with complementary standardized tests, the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test (PPVT-R) and the Test de Vocabulario en Imágenes Peabody (TVIP-H). 105 bilingual first graders, of middle to high socioeconomic status relative to national norms, were divided according to the language(s) spoken in their homes. Both groups, whether they spoke only Spanish in the home (OSH) or both English and Spanish in the home (ESH), performed near the mean of 100 in Spanish receptive vocabulary (TVIP-H means 97.0 and 96.5); in contrast, ESH group children scored more than 1 SD higher in English than OSH group children (PPVT-R means 88.0 and 69.7, respectively). It appears, therefore, that learning 2 languages at once does not harm receptive language development in the language of origin, while it does lay the groundwork for superior performance in the majority language. Furthermore, an analysis of translation equivalents, items shared by both tests, shows that a statistically significant portion of bilingual children's lexical knowledge does not overlap in their 2 languages and is therefore not reflected in single-language scores.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1505238

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Dev        ISSN: 0009-3920


  46 in total

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8.  Conceptual scoring of receptive and expressive vocabulary measures in simultaneous and sequential bilingual children.

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9.  Caregiver talk to young Spanish-English bilinguals: comparing direct observation and parent-report measures of dual-language exposure.

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Review 10.  Input and language development in bilingually developing children.

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