Identifying Strategies to Support the Communication of Prelinguistic Bilinguals with Severe Disabilities

Thesis advisor: Susan Bruce === The prevalence of children with severe and multiple disabilities who come from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds increased considerably with the rise of immigration to the U.S. However, there is very little research about the way that children with dis...

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Main Author: Vargas-Robinson, Claudia
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108270
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spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1082702019-05-10T07:37:01Z Identifying Strategies to Support the Communication of Prelinguistic Bilinguals with Severe Disabilities Vargas-Robinson, Claudia Thesis advisor: Susan Bruce Text thesis 2018 Boston College English electronic application/pdf The prevalence of children with severe and multiple disabilities who come from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds increased considerably with the rise of immigration to the U.S. However, there is very little research about the way that children with disabilities who come from a culturally and linguistically diverse background communicate and develop communication skills (Mueller, Singer, & Carranza, 2006). Furthermore, there is no established term for describing this group of children. That is why this study uses the term Prelinguistic bilinguals to define individuals who use one or more languages at a nonverbal level in their everyday lives. This definition of prelinguistic bilinguals was built upon Grosjean’s (2010) definition of bilingualism. Knowing how prelinguistic bilingual children communicate and develop communication skills is fundamental for their educational team in order to effectively interact and support the children’s communication, which in turn would have a positive effect on their learning outcomes. The main goals of this study were to describe the communication of prelinguistic bilingual children and to learn more about what teachers, teacher assistants, speech language pathologists, and parents do to support their communication in English and Spanish. This qualitative study uses a constructivist theory approach to make in-case and across-case analyses of three case studies. Findings for the study indicated that prelinguistic bilingual children were not only aware of a difference between the two languages, but could also express a preference for one of their languages. Most of the communication supports that the participating adults provided for prelinguistic bilingual children were the same communication supports used for monolingual children developing language, which did not consider the children’s bilingual needs. bilingualism communication multiple disabilities Prelinguistic second language Severe disabilities Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2018. Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. Discipline: Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108270
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic bilingualism
communication
multiple disabilities
Prelinguistic
second language
Severe disabilities
spellingShingle bilingualism
communication
multiple disabilities
Prelinguistic
second language
Severe disabilities
Vargas-Robinson, Claudia
Identifying Strategies to Support the Communication of Prelinguistic Bilinguals with Severe Disabilities
description Thesis advisor: Susan Bruce === The prevalence of children with severe and multiple disabilities who come from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds increased considerably with the rise of immigration to the U.S. However, there is very little research about the way that children with disabilities who come from a culturally and linguistically diverse background communicate and develop communication skills (Mueller, Singer, & Carranza, 2006). Furthermore, there is no established term for describing this group of children. That is why this study uses the term Prelinguistic bilinguals to define individuals who use one or more languages at a nonverbal level in their everyday lives. This definition of prelinguistic bilinguals was built upon Grosjean’s (2010) definition of bilingualism. Knowing how prelinguistic bilingual children communicate and develop communication skills is fundamental for their educational team in order to effectively interact and support the children’s communication, which in turn would have a positive effect on their learning outcomes. The main goals of this study were to describe the communication of prelinguistic bilingual children and to learn more about what teachers, teacher assistants, speech language pathologists, and parents do to support their communication in English and Spanish. This qualitative study uses a constructivist theory approach to make in-case and across-case analyses of three case studies. Findings for the study indicated that prelinguistic bilingual children were not only aware of a difference between the two languages, but could also express a preference for one of their languages. Most of the communication supports that the participating adults provided for prelinguistic bilingual children were the same communication supports used for monolingual children developing language, which did not consider the children’s bilingual needs. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2018. === Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. === Discipline: Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction.
author Vargas-Robinson, Claudia
author_facet Vargas-Robinson, Claudia
author_sort Vargas-Robinson, Claudia
title Identifying Strategies to Support the Communication of Prelinguistic Bilinguals with Severe Disabilities
title_short Identifying Strategies to Support the Communication of Prelinguistic Bilinguals with Severe Disabilities
title_full Identifying Strategies to Support the Communication of Prelinguistic Bilinguals with Severe Disabilities
title_fullStr Identifying Strategies to Support the Communication of Prelinguistic Bilinguals with Severe Disabilities
title_full_unstemmed Identifying Strategies to Support the Communication of Prelinguistic Bilinguals with Severe Disabilities
title_sort identifying strategies to support the communication of prelinguistic bilinguals with severe disabilities
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108270
work_keys_str_mv AT vargasrobinsonclaudia identifyingstrategiestosupportthecommunicationofprelinguisticbilingualswithseveredisabilities
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