Title: Bilingual Students in Early Education and Beyond



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1 Title: Bilingual Students in Early Education and Beyond Organiser: NATEDs Track 1 in cooperation with the Department of Education, UIO. Responsible: Professor Vibeke Grøver. Key Lecturers: Professor and Head of Department Paul Leseman, Department of Pedagogical and Educational Sciences, Utrecht University, the Netherlands, and Professor Catherine Snow, Harvard Graduate School of Education, Harvard University, USA. In addition, PhD students enrolled in the National Graduate School in Educational Research (NATED) will give presentations followed by comments and discussion. Dates: February 26 and February 27, 2015. Hours: February 26: 10.00-16.00, February 27: 9.00-15.00 Room: Helga Eng s House, Room 231. Subject: The course will address and discuss theoretical and methodological issues in research on young bilingual students: Are there linguistic and cognitive advantages of bilingualism? How can bilingual language exposure be measured at home and in school? How can bilingual language skills be assessed and how do they predict academic outcomes? PROGRAM: Thursday February 26: 10.00 11.45 Professor Paul Leseman: The cognitive advantages of bilingualism Recent research indicates that growing up in a situation of bilingualism can have cognitive advantages. Bilinguals have been shown to have better attention-based cognitive control skills (resistance to interference, flexibility, spatial working memory), even in socioeconomically disadvantaged circumstances and despite disadvantages in language skills. Other research, however, indicates possible disadvantages of bilingualism on general cognitive skills, in particular verbal working memory. Little is known about the mechanisms underlying the cognitive (dis)advantages of bilingualism, nor about the patterns of language exposure that pertain to the cognitive (dis)advantages. New data on the conditions of language exposure at home (e.g., first language only vs. mixed language exposure) that relate to cognitive outcomes, will be discussed. 12.00 12.30 PhD student Hanne Næss Hjetland Preschool predictors of later reading comprehension: A Campbell systematic review 12.30 13.15 Lunch

2 13.15 13.45 PhD student Mari Hustad Sandøy The usefulness of an international observation tool to assess teacher-child interactions in Norwegian preschool classrooms a preliminary analysis 13.45 14.15 PhD student Svitlana Kucherenko Preschool teachers' questions during small-group shared reading with young second language learners 14.30 15.45 Professor Catherine Snow The bilingual advantage in response to a novel language and literacy curriculum Students in 4th-8th grades who have participated in a well-implemented discussion-based literacy program show learning of targeted academic vocabulary, as well as growth in general academic language skills, perspective-taking, argumentation, writing, and reading comprehension. Some aspects of the curriculum show better uptake for second language speakers of English than for monolinguals. The mechanisms that might explain this bilingual advantage will be discussed, in light of questions about optimal curricular design for second language speakers. 15.45 16.00 Professor Øistein Anmarkrud Summary of the day. Friday February 27: 9.00-11:00 Professor Catherine Snow Predicting academic outcomes for bilingual students: assessing language skills. Language is a complex, multi-faceted, and large domain, creating challenges for those assessing it and for those using the assessments to predict academic outcomes. One important contributor to deep reading comprehension skills is the capacity for perspective-taking. Unlike vocabulary, academic language skills, and relevant background knowledge, perspective-taking may be more advanced among bilinguals, who are regularly confronted with the need to shift perspectives and consider others divergent perspectives. As part of the evaluation of a large curricular intervention, we are using a direct assessment of perspectivetaking skills developed by Robert Selman. In addition, we are evaluating perspective-taking in students written essays; preliminary results suggest that bilinguals are more advanced than monolinguals in measurs of perspective. We will explore how perspective-taking relates to complex reasoning and to academic language, two other hypothesized contributors to reading comprehension, how the curriculum explicitly targets these three skill domains, and what kinds of adaptations make the curriculum more accessible to second language learners.

3 11.15 11.45 PhD student Jarmila Bubikova Moan Constructing the multilingual child: the case of language education policy in Norway. 11.45 12.30 Lunch 12.30 13.00 PhD student Zahra Esmaeeli Emergent Literacy Skills and Home Literacy Environment 13.15 14.45 Professor Paul Leseman Measuring bilingual language exposure at home and at school. The quantity, quality and variety of exposure to the two languages is a key factor in (balanced) bilingual development. But how can we reliably measure these aspects of (dual) language exposure? Different strategies (sampling of actual speech, diaries kept by parents, structured interviews, and combinations of methods) will be reviewed and examined. Longitudinal data obtained with relatively sophisticated measures of language exposure show complex patterns of competition for scarce time, on the one hand, and positive transfer of exposure effects of one language to the other language, on the other hand. This complex interaction between exposure and exposure effects on bilingual language acquisition should to be taken into account when studying bilingual language acquisition and calls for further refinement of procedures to measure dual language exposure. 14.45 Associate professor Trude Nergård Nilssen: Conclusion LITERATURE: Relevant for Paul Leseman s talks: Blom, E., Küntay, A. C., Messer, M., Verhagen, J., & Leseman, P. (2014). The benefits of being bilingual: working memory in bilingual Turkish-Dutch children. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 128, 105-119. Calvo, A. & Bialystok, E. (2014). Independent effects of bilingualism and socioeconomic status on language ability and executive functioning. Cognition, 130, 278-288. Engel de Abreu, P., Cruz-Santos, A., Tourinho, C., Martin, R., & Bialystock, E. (2012). Bilingualism Enriches the Poor: Enhanced Cognitive Control in Low-Income Minority Children. Psychological Science, 23, 1364-1371. Messer, M. H., Leseman, P. P. M., Boom, J., Mayo, A. Y. (2010). Phonotactic probability effect in nonword recall and its relationship with vocabulary in monolingual and bilingual preschoolers. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 105, 306-323.

4 Place, S. & Hoff, E. (2011). Properties of Dual Language Exposure That Influence 2-Year- Olds Bilingual Proficiency. Child Development, 82, 1834-1849 Scheele, A. F. & Leseman, P.P.M. (2010). The home language environment of monolingual and bilingual children and their language proficiency. Applied Psycholinguistics, 31, 117-140. Weizman, Z. O. & Snow, C. E. (2001). Lexical Input as Related to Children s Vocabulary Acquisition: Effects of Sophisticated Exposure and Support for Meaning. Developmental Psychology, 37, 265-279. Relevant for Catherine Snow s talks: Hwang, J.K., Lawrence, J. F., Mo, E., & Snow, C.E. (2014). Differential effects of a systematic vocabulary intervention on adolescent language minority students with varying levels of English proficiency. International Journal of Bilingualism, 1367006914521698, first published on March 5, 2014 Lawrence, J.F., Capotosto, L., Branum-Martin, L., White, C. & Snow, C. E. (2012). Language proficiency, home-language status, and English vocabulary development: A longitudinal follow-up of the Word Generation program. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 15, 437-451. Snow, C. E. (2006). Cross-Cutting Themes and Future Research Directions. I D. August & T. Shanahan (Eds), Developing Literacy in Second-Language Learners: Report of the National Literacy Panel on Language-Minority Children and Youth. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. Snow, C.E. (2010). Reading comprehension: Reading for Learning. In P. Peterson, E. Baker, & B. McGaw (Eds.), International Encyclopedia of Education, volume 5, pp. 413-418. Oxford: Elsevier. Snow, C. E. (2014). Input to interaction to instruction: three key shifts in the history of child language research. Journal of Child Language, 41, 117-123 Snow, C. E., Lawrence, J.F., & White, C. (2009). Generating Knowledge of Academic Language Among Urban Middle School Students. Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2, 325-344. Duration: 12 hours. A course diploma requires that students attend at least 80% of the course. Language: English Credits: 3 credits with documentation, 1 credit without documentation. Documentation: Submission of paper (8 10 pages). The deadline for submission is April 30, 2014. The paper is to be submitted electronically to research administrator Kathrine Høegh-Omdal.

5 Admission: PhD students enrolled in NATED will be given priority, but it is also possible for other PhD students to apply for the course. Candidates admitted to a PhD-program at UiO: Apply by using Studentweb. Other applicants: Apply through registration form for external applicants. Deadline for registration: February 12, 2015. Further course information: Please contact, Department of Special Needs Education, Kathrine Høegh-Omdal for further information.