Exploring the Complex Syntax of School-Aged Children: The Effects of Age, Discourse and Bilingualism
Abstract
Purpose: The aim of the study was to evaluate established and novel metrics of syntactic development in school-age children, to compare elicitation tasks, and to evaluate the effects of bilingualism on measures of syntactic complexity.
Method: The participants were 48 children recruited from the province of Nova Scotia in four groups: monolingual and bilingual French-English children 7 and 12 years of age. The groups were compared using established and novel language sample measures on English language samples.
Results: Important syntactic development continues during the early school-age years. Established and novel metrics generally showed sensitivity to age and discourse type, but not bilingualism. The measures validated interest in the application of theoretical syntax to language assessment. Clinical and theoretical implications for syntax in developmental language disorders are discussed.
Subject
Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
PARLERS HYBRIDES EN TRADUCTION : L'EXEMPLE DU CHIAC ET DU CAMFRANGLAIS
Biahé, HenriThis thesis analyzes some theoretical and practical problems of the translation of Chiac and Camfranglais, as well as the strategies used by translators to solve these problems. It is based on a number of translation ... -
Le participe passe en francais: Sa syntaxe et ses fonctions dans le texte de specialite.
Lapierre, Lise. (Dalhousie University, 1995) -
Changes in Visual-spatial Cognition when Adults Learn American Sign Language and How Pre-existing Visual-spatial Cognition Predict Success in Learning
Patrick, Emily C.Visual space has unique importance in signed languages because, unlike spoken language, signed languages use space to encode multiple linguistic features. For example, space is used for grammar, where spatial locations, ...