487 research outputs found

    The relationship between input factors and bilingual proficiency: Evidence from French-English bilingual children

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    International audienceThe overall aim of this paper is to explore how certain input factors relate to bilingual children’s performance in English and French. The participants of our study were 38 French- English bilingual children aged six to eight, of middle to high socio-economic status, attending an international school in France. Data on the children’s language experiences and family background were collected through questionnaires given to the parents and the children. Language proficiency was measured using the standardised French and English versions of the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test. Having examined the strength of the relationship between overall language exposure estimates and the language proficiency measures in each language, we then turn our attention to the relationship between the children’s current language input and each of the language proficiency measures, followed by the children’s current language output and the language proficiency measures. Next we investigate the relationship between the child’s stronger language and a number of variables related to language use. These are: the language the child finds easier to speak and prefers speaking; the language the child finds easier to read in and prefers reading in; the child’s cultural allegiance; the language used with friends in the school playground; the language used with toys, and the language(s) the child would choose to use in his/her perfect school. We will present the results of this study and discuss the implications of our findings. Here we highlight the need to find ways of promoting the child’s weaker language, especially if it is the minority language which is available only in a restricted number of domains. We pay particular attention to the important role played by friends in the promotion of the children’s weaker language

    Relating input factors and dual language proficiency in French-English bilingual children

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    International audienceThe input factors that may cause variation in bilingual proficiency were investigated in 38 French-English bilinguals aged six to eight, of middle to high socio-economic status, attending an international state school in France. Data on children’s current and cumulative language exposure and family background were collected through questionnaires given to parents and children. Language proficiency was measured using the standardised French and English versions of the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test and the Student Oral Language Observation Matrix, a rating scale of oral competence, completed by children’s French and English teachers.The results indicated significant correlations between the language proficiency measures and current amount of overall exposure to each language, as well as current input and output quantity. Cumulative length of exposure was also a significant predictor for all the language proficiency measures. Furthermore, the child’s dominant language was a reliable indicator of variables related to language use, including the child’s preferred language for speaking and reading, and the language used with peers in the school playground. The implications of these findings are discussed, highlighting particularly the need to find ways of promoting the child’s weaker language

    Effect of degree of bilingualism on metalinguistic awareness in English-French bilingual children

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    International audienceNumerous studies have demonstrated that bilingual children have a processing advantage on verbal and non-­‐verbal problem solving tasks requiring high levels of control of attention, a skill component enabling subjects to suppress distracting or misleading information while focusing their attention on some other element (e.g. Ben-­‐ Zeev, 1977; Bialystok, 1986a and1986b; Ricciardelli, 1992; Bialystok and Majumder, 1998; Cromdal, 1999; Bialystok and Martin, 2004; Bialystok and Shapero, 2005; Bialystok and Martin-­‐Rhee, 2008).A study was conducted to investigate the effects of differing levels of bilingualism on metalinguistic awareness. The participants were 38 English-­‐French bilingual children aged six to eight, of middle to high socio-­‐economic status, attending an international school in France. Language proficiency was measured using the standardised English and French versions of the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test (Dunn et al., 1987; Dunn et al., 1993). Metalinguistic awareness, considered here in terms of Bialystok’s analysis and control framework (Bialystok and Ryan, 1985; Bialystok, 1986a and 2001) and Cummins’ (1976) threshold hypothesis, was assessed through seven metalinguistic tasks based on Ricciardelli (1993), which were given to the children in both their languages.The results were generally consistent with Bialystok’s and Cummins’ predictions. High level balanced bilinguals outperformed dominant bilinguals on tasks requiring a high degree of control of linguistic processing and on certain analysis tasks, but importantly in our study, only when the child’s best score, sometimes coming from the weaker language, was considered. The results also showed that although certain dominant bilinguals performed better on the metalinguistic tasks given in their stronger language, others did not. Furthermore, the results revealed that even children who were considered to be balanced bilinguals may perform quite differently on the two language versions of the same metalinguistic task

    L’analyse de ressources multimodales dans les Ă©changes pĂ©dagogiques en ligne : questions mĂ©thodologiques

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    International audienceCette communication portera sur les interactions pĂ©dagogiques synchrones qui utilisent la visioconfĂ©rence, dĂ©crite par Kern comme « a quintessential technological support for providing communicative practice with speakers at a distance, since it is the closest approximation to face-to-face conversation » (2014: 344) (« un soutien technologique par excellence qui permet de fournir une pratique communicative avec des locuteurs Ă  distance, puis qu’il se rapproche le plus Ă  la conversation en face Ă  face »). La transmission par vidĂ©o donne accĂšs Ă  plusieurs modes qui sont porteurs de sens – le discours oral ainsi que d’autres Ă©lĂ©ments multimodaux tels que les gestes, le regard et la position et le mouvement du corps. Avec le nombre croissant de formations de langue en ligne, ainsi que les projets de tĂ©lĂ©collaboration, il est important pour les praticiens de la communication mĂ©diatisĂ©e par ordinateur d’avoir une meilleure comprĂ©hension de la contribution des ressources multimodales aux situations pĂ©dagogiques et aux contextes d’apprentissage. De mĂȘme, il est important de comprendre comment les ressources sĂ©miotiques diverses sont orchestrĂ©es dans les situations interactives mĂ©diatisĂ©es par les technologies (Stockwell 2010).Nous examinerons diffĂ©rentes approches mĂ©thodologiques qui peuvent ĂȘtre dĂ©ployĂ©es pour analyser les ressources sĂ©miotiques multimodales dans les interactions pĂ©dagogiques en ligne. D’abord, nous discuterons de l’importance de dĂ©terminer les unitĂ©s d’analyse pertinentes, puisque celles-ci auront un impact sur la granularitĂ© de la transcription et orienteront l’analyse des donnĂ©es (Ellis & Barkhuizen 2005). Ensuite, en prenant appui sur trois de nos Ă©tudes, nous explorerons des mĂ©thodes diffĂ©rentes qui peuvent ĂȘtre employĂ©es pour Ă©tudier les Ă©changes pĂ©dagogiques multimodaux, en fonction des questions de recherche et des unitĂ©s d’analyse investiguĂ©es. Dans les trois Ă©tudes, nous nous focaliserons sur le rĂŽle jouĂ© par la mĂ©diatisation technologique dans les Ă©changes pĂ©dagogiques en ligne et en particulier sur les affordances fournies par la webcam pour l’enseignement des langues par visioconfĂ©rence.Les deux premiĂšres Ă©tudes s’appuieront sur un corpus d’interaction par Skype entre des Ă©tudiants français non spĂ©cialistes en anglais et une enseignante native d’anglais. Ce corpus, constituĂ© de donnĂ©es expĂ©rimentales a Ă©tĂ© utilisĂ© pour mener une Ă©tude quantitative (Guichon & Cohen 2014), ainsi qu’une Ă©tude qualitative (Cohen & Guichon 2014). Nous comparerons ces deux approches mĂ©thodologiques et montrerons les limites de l’approche quantitative pour cerner certains aspects de l’interaction dans un corpus d’apprentissage multimodal. Ensuite, dans la deuxiĂšme Ă©tude, nous explorerons quelques pistes pour une analyse qualitative et descriptive sur de courts extraits tirĂ©s du mĂȘme corpus, dans la lignĂ©e des travaux sur les gestes (ex. McNeill 1992), tels qu’ils ont Ă©tĂ© repris par les chercheurs en apprentissage en langue seconde (McCafferty & Stam 2008; Tellier & Stam 2010). L’objectif de cette Ă©tude est d’élargir notre comprĂ©hension du potentiel et des limites de la webcam dans les dispositifs de formation en ligne. Nous explorerons la contribution de diffĂ©rentes ressources sĂ©miotiques non-verbales (gestes, regards, expressions faciales) et leur orchestration multimodale (Norris 2004). Nous nous interrogerons sur les limites de la dĂ©marche expĂ©rimentale et la nĂ©cessitĂ© de conduire des recherches Ă  partir de donnĂ©es plus Ă©cologiques, comme cela sera illustrĂ© par la troisiĂšme Ă©tude (Guichon & Wigham Ă  paraĂźtre) qui s’appuie sur un projet de tĂ©lĂ©collaboration entre des Ă©tudiants irlandais non spĂ©cialistes en français et des apprentis enseignants de français langue Ă©trangĂšre en France.Mots clefsressources multimodales ; interactions en ligne ; visioconfĂ©rence ; mimogestualitĂ© ; mĂ©thodologie RĂ©fĂ©rencesCohen, C. & Guichon, N. (2014). Researching nonverbal dimensions in synchronous videoconferenced-based interactions. Presentation at CALICO Conference, University of Athens, OH, USA.Ellis, R. & Barkhuizen, G.P. (2005). Analysing learner language. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Guichon, N. & Cohen, C. (2014). The impact of the webcam on an online L2 interaction. Canadian Modern Language Review, 70(3), 331–354.Guichon, N. & Wigham, C.R. (Ă  paraĂźtre). A semiotic perspective on webconferencing-supported language teaching, ReCALL journal.Kern, R.G. (2014). Technology as Pharmakon: The Promise and Perils of the Internet for Foreign Language Education. The Modern Language Journal, 98(1), 340-358.McCafferty, S.G. & Stam, G. (Eds.). (2008). Gesture: Second Language Acquisition and Classroom Research. New York: Routledge.McNeill, D. (1992). Hand and mind: What gestures reveal about thought. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. Norris, S. (2004). Analyzing multimodal interaction – A methodological framework. New York: Routledge. Stockwell, G. (2010). Effects of multimodality in computer-mediated communication tasks. Dans M. Thomas & H. Reinders (Eds.). Task-based language learning and teaching with technology (pp. 83-104). London: Continuum.Tellier, M. & Stam, G. (2010). StratĂ©gies verbales et gestuelles dans l’explication lexicale d’un verbe d’action. Dans V. RiviĂšre (Ed.). SpĂ©cificitĂ©s et diversitĂ© des interactions didactiques (pp. 357-374). Paris: Rivenue Éditions

    The relationship between linguistic factors and bilingual proficiency in French-English bilingual children

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    International audienceThis paper explores input factors that may cause variation in bilingual language proficiency in 38 bilingual children attending an international school. Results indicate a strong association between language exposure estimates and proficiency measures. The child's stronger language is shown to be a reliable predictor of variables related to language use. Abstract: The overall aim of this paper is to explore how certain linguistic factors relate to bilingual children's performance in English and French. The participants of our study are 38 French-English bilingual children aged six to eight, of middle to high socio-economic status, attending an international school in France. Data on the children's language experiences and family background were collected through two questionnaires -one completed by the parents, and the other given orally by the researcher to the children. Language proficiency was measured using the standardised French and English versions of the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test, and the Student Oral Language Observation Matrix, a rating scale completed by the children's French and English teachers. Having examined the strength of the relationship between overall language exposure estimates and the language proficiency measures in each language, we then turn our attention to the relationship between each of the proficiency measures and, first, the amount of current language input to which the children are exposed, and second, the children's current amount of output in each language. Next we investigate the relationship between the child's stronger language and several variables related to language use, including the language the child finds easier to speak, the language the child prefers reading in and the language used with friends in the school playground

    The effect of language experiences on oral proficiency in the bilingual child’s two languages

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    International audienceThis study aims to identify how differing language experiences impact on the level of oral proficiency attained in the bilingual child’s two languages. Participants were 39 seven- to eight-year-old French-English bilingual children from high SES families attending an international state school in France. Detailed information on the children’s language experiences was gathered through two questionnaires, one completed by the parents and one given orally to each child.Proficiency was assessed in each language using the English and French versions of the standardised Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test, along with criterion-referenced evaluations of oral competence in each language completed by the children’s English and French teachers, and by the researcher, following several individual interviews with each child.Initial analysis of the questionnaires shows that most of the children in the sample fall into one of three family types: nineteen children with one English-speaking and one French-speaking parent who generally follow the OPOL strategy, nine with two French-speaking parents who having lived several years in an English-speaking country, have returned to France and eight with two English-speaking parents who are in France on a short- or long-term basis.Preliminary results suggest that certain factors have a determining role in accounting for the level of oral competence attained in each of the child’s languages but that these factors operate differentially according to family type. The factors identified are quality and quantity of input, discourse strategies within the family and wider community, age and contexts of acquisition, motivation, and child’s rank in the family in relation to siblings.This research is the first part of a Ph.D project which will examine the extent to which degree of bilingualism and language experiences influence bilingual children’s cognitive development and, in particular, metalinguistic awareness in their two languages

    Gun Violence, Policing, and Young Communities of Color

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    Young people of color are leading the response to recent instances of gun violence. Young people do not all experience gun violence at the same rate nor do they feel its consequences evenly. Our research on young adults between the ages of 18 and 29 years old highlights the very different experiences young people have with guns, gun violence, and policing across racial and ethnic groups

    New Media and Youth Political Action

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    To rigorously consider the impact of new media on the political and civic behavior of young people, The MacArthur Research Network on Youth and Participatory Politics (YPP) developed and fielded one of the first large-scale, nationally representative studies of new media and politics among young people. The two principal researchers for the survey component of the YPP, Cathy J. Cohen of the University of Chicago and Joseph Kahne of Mills College, oversaw a research team that surveyed nearly 3,000 respondents between the ages of 15 and 25 years of age. Unlike any prior study of youth and new media, this study included large numbers of black, Latino, and Asian American respondents, which allows for unique and powerful statistical comparisons across race with a focus on young people.Until now there has been limited opportunity and data available to comprehensively explore the relationship between new media and the politics of young people. One of the few entities to engage in this type of rigorous analysis has been the Pew Internet and American Life Project. The YPP study expands on this field-leading work by including an extensive battery of items addressing participatory politics and adequate numbers of participants from different racial and ethnic groups, thus allowing for analysis of how different groups of young people were engaged with new media in the political realm.The YPP study findings suggest that fundamental changes in political expectations and practices may be occurring -- especially for youth. The analysis of the data collected reveals that youth are taking advantage of an expanded set of participatory practices in the political realm in ways that amplify their voice and sometimes their influence, thus increasing the ways young people participate in political life. The YPP researchers label this expanded set of opportunities and actions participatory politics

    Cet obscur objet de l'interaction médiatisée : la webcam dans un échange pédagogique en ligne

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    International audienceDe plus en plus de projets tĂ©lĂ©collaboratifs reposent sur les outils de visioconfĂ©rence poste-Ă -poste pour servir de moyens d’échange synchrone entre les apprenants (cf. par exemple Jauregi, de Graaff & Canto, 2011) ou des tuteurs et des apprenants (cf. Develotte, Guichon, Kern, 2008). Les recherches portant sur l’apport de l’image de la webcam ont par exemple soulignĂ© l’intĂ©rĂȘt de disposer d’indices paralinguistiques pour dĂ©sambiguĂŻser la communication entre les interactants et faciliter l’intercomprĂ©hension (cf. Wang, 2004). D’autres auteurs ont mis en valeur le potentiel de la visioconfĂ©rence pour dĂ©velopper les compĂ©tences interculturelles (O’Dowd, 2006). Certains chercheurs en revanche se sont montrĂ©s plus circonspects vis-Ă -vis du potentiel de la multimodalitĂ© et ont montrĂ© que celle-ci pouvait provoquer une division de l’attention (Sweller, 2005). Dans le champ de l’enseignement-apprentissage des langues, les Ă©tudes empiriques continuent de voir le jour mais de nombreuses questions demeurent, sur les plans linguistique et didactique, parmi lesquelles deux feront l’objet de cette Ă©tude : En quoi le fait de voir son interlocuteur influence-t-il le dĂ©roulement d’une interaction pĂ©dagogique en ligne ? Comment les interlocuteurs interprĂštent-ils les Ă©lĂ©ments verbaux et non-verbaux dans une interaction pĂ©dagogique mĂ©diatisĂ©e par la webcam, et comment ces Ă©lĂ©ments influencent-ils la gestion et la progression de l’échange ? Pour rĂ©pondre Ă  ces questions, les outils de l’analyse conversationnelle peuvent permettre d’aborder les Ă©changes mĂ©diatisĂ©s non plus seulement du point de vue subjectif des acteurs qui rapportent leurs perceptions par rapport Ă  l’image (cf. Yamada & Akahori, 2009) mais en examinant attentivement les phĂ©nomĂšnes liĂ©s au rythme de l’interaction, Ă  la prise d’information permise par la webcam et aux comportements en partie thĂ©ĂątralisĂ©s des interactants (de Chanay, 2011). Nous postulons qu’une analyse de ce genre peut fournir des indications pour guider la formation des futurs enseignants en les amenant Ă  dĂ©velopper des stratĂ©gies sĂ©mio-didactiques (Guichon, 2013), mobilisant de maniĂšre Ă©troitement liĂ©e des compĂ©tences pĂ©dagogiques propres Ă  la conduite des interactions orales en L2 et des compĂ©tences sĂ©miotiques exploitant de maniĂšre adĂ©quate les ressources et les contraintes des outils de mĂ©diatisation. Afin de pouvoir mettre au jour des stratĂ©gies de communication parmi des apprenants variĂ©s confrontĂ©s Ă  une mĂȘme situation, nous avons recueilli un corpus, non pas en situation Ă©cologique comme cela a par exemple Ă©tĂ© fait par Drissi (2011), mais en mettant au point une situation quasi expĂ©rimentale de nĂ©gociation du sens mĂ©diatisĂ©e par la webcam. Dans cette Ă©tude, 20 Ă©tudiants français du secteur LANSAD ayant un niveau B2 en anglais ont dĂ©crit quatre photos Ă  une enseignante inconnue, native d’anglais, pendant une interaction par le logiciel de visioconfĂ©rence Skype pendant un Ă©change d’une dizaine de minutes. Les 20 interactions ont Ă©tĂ© enregistrĂ©es avec un logiciel de capture d’écran dynamique et ont Ă©tĂ© analysĂ©es avec ELAN, outil d’annotation de son et de vidĂ©o. L’objectif de cette Ă©tude est d’élargir notre comprĂ©hension du potentiel et des limites de la webcam dans les dispositifs de formation en ligne. En adoptant une approche qualitative, nous utiliserons les outils de l’analyse conversationnelle (Chartrand & Bargh, 1999 ; Traverso, 2007) pour analyser les gestes, les mimiques et les regards des apprenants et de l’enseignante et le rĂŽle qu'ils jouent dans l'interaction. En conduisant une description fine des interactions, nous analyserons aussi la contribution de l’image fournie par la webcam en terme de mise en scĂšne de soi (1) comme locuteur non natif et (2) comme expert en charge de l’interaction

    The Impact Of The Webcam On An Online L2 Interaction

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    International audienceIt is intuitively felt that visual cues should enhance online communication, and this experimental study aims to test this prediction by exploring the value provided by a webcam in an online L2 pedagogical teacher-to learner interaction. A total of 40 French undergraduate students with a B2 level in English were asked to describe in English four previously unseen photographs to a native English-speaking teacher of EFL via Skype, a free web-based videoconferencing tool, during a 10-minute interaction. Twenty students were assigned to the videoconferencing condition and 20 to the audioconferencing condition. All 40 interactions were recorded using dynamic screen capture software and were analyzed with ELAN, a sound and video annotation tool. Participants' perceptions of the online interaction are first compared with regard to the issues of social presence and their understanding and appreciation of the online interaction, using data gathered from a post-task questionnaire. The study then explores whether seeing the interlocutor's image impacts on the patterns of these synchronous exchanges and on the word search episodes. Results indicated that the impact of the webcam on the online pedagogical interaction was not as critical as had been predicted
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