Learning to read in English: Comparing monolingual English and bilingual Zulu-English Grade 3 learners

The acquisition of reading skills of 100 monolingual English and 100 bilingual Zulu-English third-grade learners was investigated by measuring their phonological- and reading skills. Little research exists on how the presence of a spoken-only Zulu (L1) could influence the English (L2) reading acquis...

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Main Author: Diana Soares De Sousa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2011-12-01
Series:South African Journal of Childhood Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajce.co.za/index.php/sajce/article/view/70
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spelling doaj-b094af68477140058a964faa7d71b78a2021-04-02T10:59:29ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Childhood Education2223-76742223-76822011-12-0111e1e1810.4102/sajce.v1i1.7037Learning to read in English: Comparing monolingual English and bilingual Zulu-English Grade 3 learnersDiana Soares De Sousa0University of Witwatersrand Department of PsychologyThe acquisition of reading skills of 100 monolingual English and 100 bilingual Zulu-English third-grade learners was investigated by measuring their phonological- and reading skills. Little research exists on how the presence of a spoken-only Zulu (L1) could influence the English (L2) reading acquisition process. PA tasks were correlated with reading measures in English as an L1 and L2, but significant differences were found on all of the measures; implying overall support for use of PA measures for reading achievement in L1 English monolinguals and in the English (L2) of bilingual children, but with the understanding that L1 Zulu spoken proficiency and L2 English-only instruction influences the underlying repertoire of PA skills used for L2 English reading acquisition, different from that of the L1 English reading acquisition process. The implications of these findings for L2 reading development and using phonological measures across cultural-linguistic groups, for educational purposes, are discussedhttps://sajce.co.za/index.php/sajce/article/view/70bilingualismphonological awarenessorthographic transparency hypo-thesisword readingreading comprehension.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Diana Soares De Sousa
spellingShingle Diana Soares De Sousa
Learning to read in English: Comparing monolingual English and bilingual Zulu-English Grade 3 learners
South African Journal of Childhood Education
bilingualism
phonological awareness
orthographic transparency hypo-thesis
word reading
reading comprehension.
author_facet Diana Soares De Sousa
author_sort Diana Soares De Sousa
title Learning to read in English: Comparing monolingual English and bilingual Zulu-English Grade 3 learners
title_short Learning to read in English: Comparing monolingual English and bilingual Zulu-English Grade 3 learners
title_full Learning to read in English: Comparing monolingual English and bilingual Zulu-English Grade 3 learners
title_fullStr Learning to read in English: Comparing monolingual English and bilingual Zulu-English Grade 3 learners
title_full_unstemmed Learning to read in English: Comparing monolingual English and bilingual Zulu-English Grade 3 learners
title_sort learning to read in english: comparing monolingual english and bilingual zulu-english grade 3 learners
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Childhood Education
issn 2223-7674
2223-7682
publishDate 2011-12-01
description The acquisition of reading skills of 100 monolingual English and 100 bilingual Zulu-English third-grade learners was investigated by measuring their phonological- and reading skills. Little research exists on how the presence of a spoken-only Zulu (L1) could influence the English (L2) reading acquisition process. PA tasks were correlated with reading measures in English as an L1 and L2, but significant differences were found on all of the measures; implying overall support for use of PA measures for reading achievement in L1 English monolinguals and in the English (L2) of bilingual children, but with the understanding that L1 Zulu spoken proficiency and L2 English-only instruction influences the underlying repertoire of PA skills used for L2 English reading acquisition, different from that of the L1 English reading acquisition process. The implications of these findings for L2 reading development and using phonological measures across cultural-linguistic groups, for educational purposes, are discussed
topic bilingualism
phonological awareness
orthographic transparency hypo-thesis
word reading
reading comprehension.
url https://sajce.co.za/index.php/sajce/article/view/70
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