Children from bilingual homes are a large and growing segment of the population. Their early language competencies are neither well described nor understood. Because language skills during the preschool years are predictive of later academic achievement and social adjustment, the current poor understanding of early bilingual development constitutes a significant public health problem.
Aim 1 of the proposed research is to identify the environmental factors associated with successful bilingual development in children exposed to two languages from infancy. The language skills and language environments of 2 1/2 -year-old Spanish-English bilingual children will be assessed, and the relation of their language skills to their language environments investigated. The proposed research will be the first to describe young bilingual children's language competencies in terms of their phonological, lexical, and morphosyntactic development in both languages, assessed with standardized instruments and with measures based on spontaneous speech samples. The proposed research will be the first to describe bilingual environments using caregiver interviews, caregiver-kept diaries of their children's language experience, and samples of caregivers'child-directed speech in both languages. The approaches to describing children's language competencies and language environments will make use of variable-centered and person-centered data analytic techniques, yielding descriptions in terms of continuous dimensions of variability and in terms of frequently-occurring types, or categories. Analyses of the relations between skills and environments will be conducted using both kinds of descriptors.
Aim 2 of the proposed research is to test theory-driven hypotheses regarding mechanisms of language development against the evidence of within- and across-language interrelations among components of language skill in bilingual children. Bilingual children may show patterns of development in which phonological and morphosyntactic development are more advanced than lexical development and in which receptive competence is more advanced than productive competence, relative to monolingual norms. In such bilingual children, the interrelations among skills across domains should differ from those typically observed, and the specifics of those interrcorrelations should constrain hypotheses regarding the mechanisms of language acquisition and suggest ways in which growing knowledge of two languages does or does not interact in the process of bilingual development. The proposed research will fill a gap in the knowledge base needed to provide quality educational and clinical services to a substantial segment of the nation's children and will advance scientific understanding of the process of early bilingual development.

Public Health Relevance

The current lack of information about the language skills of children growing up in bilingual homes is an obstacle to maximizing the economic potential of a substantial segment of the nation's children.
The aims of the proposed research are to describe the patterns of bilingual competencies that children display and to identify environmental correlates of successful bilingualism at an early, critical juncture in children's development.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Exploratory/Developmental Grants (R21)
Project #
3R21HD060718-01S1
Application #
7900696
Study Section
Language and Communication Study Section (LCOM)
Program Officer
Mccardle, Peggy D
Project Start
2009-04-15
Project End
2011-03-31
Budget Start
2009-04-15
Budget End
2010-03-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2009
Total Cost
$57,524
Indirect Cost
Name
Florida Atlantic University
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
004147534
City
Boca Raton
State
FL
Country
United States
Zip Code
33431
Hoff, Erika; Quinn, Jamie M; Giguere, David (2018) What explains the correlation between growth in vocabulary and grammar? New evidence from latent change score analyses of simultaneous bilingual development. Dev Sci 21:
Ribot, Krystal M; Hoff, Erika; Burridge, Andrea (2018) Language Use Contributes to Expressive Language Growth: Evidence From Bilingual Children. Child Dev 89:929-940
Core, Cynthia; Scarpelli, Chiara (2015) Phonological development in young bilinguals: clinical implications. Semin Speech Lang 36:100-8
Hoff, Erika; Core, Cynthia (2015) What Clinicians Need to Know about Bilingual Development. Semin Speech Lang 36:89-99
Ribot, Krystal M; Hoff, Erika (2014) ""¿Cómo estas?"" ""I'm good."" Conversational code-switching is related to profiles of expressive and receptive proficiency in Spanish-English bilingual toddlers. Int J Behav Dev 38:333-341
Hoff, Erika; Rumiche, Rosario; Burridge, Andrea et al. (2014) Expressive Vocabulary Development in Children from Bilingual and Monolingual Homes: A Longitudinal Study from Two to Four Years. Early Child Res Q 29:433-444
Core, Cynthia; Hoff, Erika; Rumiche, Rosario et al. (2013) Total and conceptual vocabulary in Spanish-English bilinguals from 22 to 30 months: implications for assessment. J Speech Lang Hear Res 56:1637-49
Hoff, Erika; Parra, Marisol (2011) Mechanisms linking phonological development to lexical development--a commentary on Stoel-Gammon's 'Relationships between lexical and phonological development in young children'. J Child Lang 38:46-50
Place, Silvia; Hoff, Erika (2011) Properties of dual language exposure that influence 2-year-olds' bilingual proficiency. Child Dev 82:1834-49