Bilingualism in Childhood and its Effect on Children’s Academic Performance
Citation:
Marta Alvim, 'Bilingualism in Childhood and its Effect on Children’s Academic Performance', [thesis], Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Education, 2022, Trinity College Dublin thesesDownload Item:
Abstract:
The present thesis aims to explore how the acquisition and knowledge of more than one
language impacts the development of social and academic skills in young learners, and
what influence this multi-linguistic perception can bring upon children growing up within an
environment where the the family and cultural context differentiate in language.
Furthermore, it also focuses on the qualitative performance of school-aged children and
explores the influences multi and mono-lingual parents, the society they’re introduced in
and the educational system may have on their cognitive skills, while their minds and
bodies are still growing and evolving.
Following a desk-based research process, this dissertation’s empirical material comprises
student-teacher-parent studies, papers on linguistic-acquirement skills in children and preadolescents
and other editorial pieces on bilingualism in young learners and its relation
with school performance. Theoretical frames of reference are based on four dimensions of
learning, regardless of how many languages a child masters: content, social, educational
and emotional, which, consequently, all have influence on their productivity within an
academic scenario.
The results reveal that the exposure to a bilingual family context and/or school context had
the potential to improve a child’s social relations and increase participation, collaboration
and on-task communication with peers and even strangers, due to the understanding of
more than one linguistic concept.
However, if not done correctly and with the support and constant participation of adult
guardians to ensure the correct development of both languages, growing up in a multilingual
environment has been seen to cause poor lexical awareness, grammatical
confusion and even a lack of sense of belonging in social circumstances.
Three literary review studies compared both perspectives of whether a bilingual child’s
school performance is directly influenced by their linguistic capacity or not. Results
revealed slightly different realities that seem to vary according to individuality instead of
the bilingual population niche as a whole. An overarching conclusion is that the capacity of
an individual to acquire multi-lingual skills easily and naturally is more strongly related to
their excellent academic performance, rather than an individual that possesses two mother
tongues from birth, which for them, is considered just a normal core-skill to have and is
therefore not related to their scholastic capacities. Children that naturally show a bigger
dexterity for languages seem to appeal to cognitive, social and emotional dimensions of
learning more effortlessly and have a higher potential to broaden and achieving theoretical
and physical approaches in education growing up.
Author: Alvim, Marta
Advisor:
Hyland, JohnPublisher:
Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of EducationType of material:
thesisCollections
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Full text availableSubject:
Psychology of Education), EducationMetadata
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