5 results match your criteria: "Mercator European Research Centre on Multilingualism and Language Learning.[Affiliation]"
This is the first large-scale study of resources as a form of - that is, a way of influencing children's language practices. We introduce the distinction between child-directed resources (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Multiling
March 2023
Mercator European Research Centre on Multilingualism and Language Learning, Fryske Akademy, Leeuwarden, Netherlands.
Many parents express concerns for their children's multilingual development, yet little is known about the nature and strength of these concerns - especially among parents in multilingual societies. This pre-registered, questionnaire-based study addresses this gap by examining the concerns of 821 Quebec-based parents raising infants and toddlers aged 0-4 years with multiple languages in the home. Factor analysis of parents' Likert-scale responses revealed that parents had (1) concerns regarding the effect of children's multilingualism on their cognition, and (2) concerns regarding children's exposure to and attainment of fluency in their languages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Lang Soc Psychol
October 2022
Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
This is the first large-scale, quantitative study of the evaluative dimensions and potential predictors of Quebec-based parents' attitudes towards childhood multilingualism. Such attitudes are assumed to constitute a determinant of parental language choices, and thereby influence children's multilingual development. The newly-developed Attitudes towards Childhood Multilingualism Questionnaire was used to gather data from 825 participants raising an infant/toddler aged 0-4 years with multiple languages in the home.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolicy Insights Behav Brain Sci
March 2022
Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Many infants and children around the world grow up exposed to two or more languages. Their success in learning each of their languages is a direct consequence of the quantity and quality of their everyday language experience, including at home, in daycare and preschools, and in the broader community context. Here, we discuss how research on early language learning can inform policies that promote successful bilingual development across the varied contexts in which infants and children live and learn.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Artif Intell
April 2021
Fryske Akademy, Leeuwarden, Netherlands.
This paper investigates the usability of Twitter as a resource for the study of language change in progress in low-resource languages. It is a panel study of a vigorous change in progress, the loss of final t in four relative pronouns () in Frisian, a language spoken by ± 450,000 speakers in the north-west of the Netherlands. This paper deals with the issues encountered in retrieving and analyzing tweets in low-resource languages, in the analysis of low-frequency variables, and in gathering background information on Twitterers.
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