Heritage Language Maintenance and Use among 1.5 Generation Khmer College Students

Most studies of heritage language maintenance have reported a steep attrition in heritage language use among the 1.5 and 2nd generation children of immigrants, in particular among East Asian groups. However, not much is known about the role of heritage languages and the patterns of language maintena...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ravy S. Lao, Jin Sook Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Purdue University Press 2009-01-01
Series:Journal of Southeast Asian American Education and Advancement
Online Access:http://docs.lib.purdue.edu/jsaaea/vol4/iss1/3/
id doaj-b94989856fc3497b845934027739410d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b94989856fc3497b845934027739410d2020-11-24T22:32:04ZengPurdue University PressJournal of Southeast Asian American Education and Advancement2153-89992153-89992009-01-014110.7771/2153-8999.1094Heritage Language Maintenance and Use among 1.5 Generation Khmer College StudentsRavy S. Lao0Jin Sook Lee1University of California, Santa BarbaraUniversity of California, Santa BarbaraMost studies of heritage language maintenance have reported a steep attrition in heritage language use among the 1.5 and 2nd generation children of immigrants, in particular among East Asian groups. However, not much is known about the role of heritage languages and the patterns of language maintenance within refugee communities. This study focuses on heritage language use and maintenance among 1.5 generation Khmer college students. The findings show that Khmer students report a high frequency of heritage language use within the home with their parents as well as outside of the home with their co-ethnic peers. The data reveal that oral proficiency in Khmer is significantly more developed than literacy skills and is a necessity for bridging communication with parents and participating in co-ethnic peer social networks. The results of the study also indicate that these students development of English oral and literacy skills were significantly higher than their heritage language skills suggesting a similar trajectory of language loss similar to other immigrant groups, but perhaps at a slower rate. http://docs.lib.purdue.edu/jsaaea/vol4/iss1/3/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ravy S. Lao
Jin Sook Lee
spellingShingle Ravy S. Lao
Jin Sook Lee
Heritage Language Maintenance and Use among 1.5 Generation Khmer College Students
Journal of Southeast Asian American Education and Advancement
author_facet Ravy S. Lao
Jin Sook Lee
author_sort Ravy S. Lao
title Heritage Language Maintenance and Use among 1.5 Generation Khmer College Students
title_short Heritage Language Maintenance and Use among 1.5 Generation Khmer College Students
title_full Heritage Language Maintenance and Use among 1.5 Generation Khmer College Students
title_fullStr Heritage Language Maintenance and Use among 1.5 Generation Khmer College Students
title_full_unstemmed Heritage Language Maintenance and Use among 1.5 Generation Khmer College Students
title_sort heritage language maintenance and use among 1.5 generation khmer college students
publisher Purdue University Press
series Journal of Southeast Asian American Education and Advancement
issn 2153-8999
2153-8999
publishDate 2009-01-01
description Most studies of heritage language maintenance have reported a steep attrition in heritage language use among the 1.5 and 2nd generation children of immigrants, in particular among East Asian groups. However, not much is known about the role of heritage languages and the patterns of language maintenance within refugee communities. This study focuses on heritage language use and maintenance among 1.5 generation Khmer college students. The findings show that Khmer students report a high frequency of heritage language use within the home with their parents as well as outside of the home with their co-ethnic peers. The data reveal that oral proficiency in Khmer is significantly more developed than literacy skills and is a necessity for bridging communication with parents and participating in co-ethnic peer social networks. The results of the study also indicate that these students development of English oral and literacy skills were significantly higher than their heritage language skills suggesting a similar trajectory of language loss similar to other immigrant groups, but perhaps at a slower rate.
url http://docs.lib.purdue.edu/jsaaea/vol4/iss1/3/
work_keys_str_mv AT ravyslao heritagelanguagemaintenanceanduseamong15generationkhmercollegestudents
AT jinsooklee heritagelanguagemaintenanceanduseamong15generationkhmercollegestudents
_version_ 1725735221630861312