1 research outputs found
A diachronic study of code-switching patterns in the language of a third culture Filipino kid in Korea
Code-switching has been of immense interest in bilingualism for decades, and most previous
studies present different code-switching functions in the language of bilinguals. However, a
diachronic exploration of code-switching patterns in young polyglots’ production is a road less
ventured. The present study follows the three-year language development of a Filipino third culture
kid (living in a culture other than their parents’) in Korea from when he was 5;5 to 8;5 years old.
Discourse analyses and hours of ethnographic observation through audio/video recordings expose
a substantial shift of code-switching patterns across the three stages of language development.
Significant changes can be observed explicitly in code-switching as referential function, addressee
specification, and cross-cultural solidarity. The current investigation proposes that there is a
diachronic change in the patterns of code-switching when a child’s new language develops, and
the results resonate with the argument that code-switching is used for increasingly sophisticated
purposes to manifest multicompetence, behavior transformation, and identity change when a
certain level of communicative fluency is reached. Finally, the study provides useful insights
toward a cross-cultural understanding of the dynamic interplay of code-switching and multicultural
kids’ language in a pluralistic community