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Independent effects of bilingualism and socioeconomic status on language ability and executive functioning

โœ Scribed by Calvo, Alejandra; Bialystok, Ellen


Book ID
121741424
Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2014
Tongue
English
Weight
903 KB
Volume
130
Category
Article
ISSN
0010-0277

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โœฆ Synopsis


One hundred and seventy-five children who were 6-years old were assigned to one of four groups that differed in socioeconomic status (SES; working class or middle class) and language background (monolingual or bilingual). The children completed tests of nonverbal intelligence, language tests assessing receptive vocabulary and attention based on picture naming, and two tests of executive functioning. All children performed equivalently on the basic intelligence tests, but performance on the language and executive functioning tasks was influenced by both SES and bilingualism. Middle-class children outperformed working-class children on all measures, and bilingual children obtained lower scores than monolingual children on language tests but higher scores than monolingual children on the executive functioning tasks. There were no interactions with either group factors or task factors. Thus, each of SES and bilingualism contribute significantly and independently to children's development irrespective of the child's level on the other factor.


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