Galambos S J, Goldin-Meadow S
Yale University.
Cognition. 1990 Jan;34(1):1-56. doi: 10.1016/0010-0277(90)90030-n.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether a bilingual environment-the juxtaposition of two language systems learned simultaneously-enhances children's awareness of the language(s) they are learning to speak. The study explores the development of metalinguistic awareness at three different levels of explicit knowledge about language in monolingual children, and assesses the effects of a bilingual experience on this developmental process. To observe the development of metalinguistic awareness and to test the bilingual hypothesis, we compared metalinguistic skills in 32 Spanish-speaking and 32 English-speaking monolinguals and in 32 Spanish-English bilinguals aged 4:5 to 8:0. The Spanish and English metalinguistic tests each contained 15 different ungrammatical constructions (e.g., "Steven and Robert is a brother") and 15 grammatically correct "fillers." For each item, the children were asked in the appropriate language to note whether the construction was correct or incorrect, to correct the errors they noted, and to explain why those errors were wrong. We found that the monolingual children followed the same sequence in acquiring the ability to detect, to correct, and to explain grammatical errors; in particular, they progressed from a content-based orientation to a form-based orientation to language at each of the three levels. However, we noted different outcomes in terms of the types of grammatical constructions that were easy for monolinguals to master at each level-the constructions that were easy to detect and correct were distinct from those that were easy to explain. The bilingual experience was found to speed the transition from a content-based to a form-based approach to language at certain levels of awareness (detection and correction), but had less of an effect on explanations. Moreover, the bilingual experience did not appear to affect the types of grammatical constructions that were easy to master at any of the three levels. These data suggest that the experience of learning two languages hastens the development of certain metalinguistic skills in young children, but does not alter the course of that development. Thus, while learning two languages may enhance a speaker's "ear" for regularities of form, it does not appear to augment his grammatical "mind" for understanding those regularities.
本研究的目的是确定双语环境——两种同时学习的语言系统的并列——是否能增强儿童对其正在学习说的语言的意识。该研究探讨了单语儿童在关于语言的三种不同明确知识水平上元语言意识的发展,并评估了双语经历对这一发展过程的影响。为了观察元语言意识的发展并检验双语假设,我们比较了32名说西班牙语的单语儿童、32名说英语的单语儿童以及32名年龄在4岁5个月至8岁的西班牙语-英语双语儿童的元语言技能。西班牙语和英语的元语言测试各自包含15种不同的不符合语法的结构(例如,“史蒂文和罗伯特是兄弟”)以及15个语法正确的“填充项”。对于每个项目,用相应的语言要求儿童指出该结构是否正确,改正他们所指出的错误,并解释这些错误为何是错的。我们发现,单语儿童在获得检测、改正和解释语法错误的能力方面遵循相同的顺序;特别是,他们在三个水平中的每一个水平上都从基于内容的取向发展到基于形式的语言取向。然而,我们注意到在每个水平上,单语儿童容易掌握的语法结构类型有不同的结果——容易检测和改正的结构与容易解释的结构不同。研究发现,双语经历在某些意识水平(检测和改正)上加速了从基于内容的语言方法到基于形式的语言方法的转变,但对解释的影响较小。此外,双语经历似乎并未影响在三个水平中的任何一个水平上容易掌握的语法结构类型。这些数据表明,学习两种语言的经历加速了幼儿某些元语言技能的发展,但并未改变该发展的进程。因此,虽然学习两种语言可能会增强说话者对形式规律的“语感”,但似乎并未增强其理解这些规律的语法“思维”。