Marshall Chloë R, Hobsbaum Angela
Department of Psychology and Human Development, UCL Institute of Education, University College London, UK.
Int J Lang Commun Disord. 2015 Sep-Oct;50(5):616-28. doi: 10.1111/1460-6984.12161. Epub 2015 Feb 26.
Children who are learning English as an Additional Language (EAL) may start school with smaller vocabularies than their monolingual peers. Given the links between vocabulary and academic achievement, it is important to evaluate interventions that are designed to support vocabulary learning in this group of children.
To evaluate an intervention, namely Sign-Supported English (SSE), which uses conventionalized manual gestures alongside spoken words to support the learning of English vocabulary by children with EAL. Specifically, the paper investigates whether SSE has a positive impact on Reception class children's vocabulary development over and above English-only input, as measured over a 6-month period.
METHODS & PROCEDURES: A total of 104 children aged 4-5 years were recruited from two neighbouring schools in a borough of Outer London. A subset of 66 had EAL. In one school, the teachers used SSE, and in the other school they did not. Pupils in each school were tested at two time points (the beginning of terms 1 and 3) using three different assessments of vocabulary. Classroom-based observations of the teachers' and pupils' manual communication were also carried out.
OUTCOMES & RESULTS: Results of the vocabulary assessments revealed that using SSE had no effect on how well children with EAL learnt English vocabulary: EAL pupils from the SSE school did not learn more words than EAL pupils at the comparison school. SSE was used in almost half of the teachers' observations in the SSE school, while spontaneous gestures were used with similar frequency by teachers in the comparison school.
CONCLUSIONS & IMPLICATIONS: There are alternative explanations for the results. The first is that the use of signs alongside spoken English does not help EAL children of this age to learn words. Alternatively, SSE does have an effect, but we were unable to detect it because (1) teachers in the comparison school used very rich natural gesture and/or (2) teachers in the SSE school did not know enough BSL and this inhibited their use of spontaneous gesture. Explanations (1) and (2) might mean that the potential benefits of spontaneous gesture in the input to the children in the comparison school matched any potential benefits of SSE. We suggest that studying early years professionals' spontaneous use of gesture, and how their gesture supports the language learning of all children in their class, would be fruitful areas of research for the future.
将英语作为附加语言(EAL)学习的儿童入学时的词汇量可能比单语同龄人少。鉴于词汇量与学业成绩之间的联系,评估旨在支持这类儿童词汇学习的干预措施非常重要。
评估一种干预措施,即手语辅助英语(SSE),该措施通过常规化的手势与口语单词相结合,来支持以英语为附加语言的儿童学习英语词汇。具体而言,本文调查了在6个月的时间里,与仅接受英语输入相比,SSE对学前班儿童的词汇发展是否有积极影响。
从伦敦外一个行政区的两所相邻学校招募了104名4至5岁的儿童。其中66名儿童以英语为附加语言。在一所学校,教师使用SSE,而在另一所学校则不使用。每所学校的学生在两个时间点(学期1和学期3开始时)接受了三种不同的词汇评估。还对教师和学生的手势交流进行了课堂观察。
词汇评估结果显示,使用SSE对以英语为附加语言的儿童学习英语词汇的效果没有影响:来自使用SSE学校的以英语为附加语言的学生,学到的单词并不比对照学校以英语为附加语言的学生多。在使用SSE的学校,近一半的教师观察中使用了SSE,而对照学校的教师使用自发手势的频率与之相似。
对这些结果有其他解释。第一种解释是,在英语口语旁边使用手语并不能帮助这个年龄段以英语为附加语言的儿童学习单词。另一种解释是,SSE确实有效果,但我们无法检测到,原因是(1)对照学校的教师使用了非常丰富的自然手势,和/或(2)使用SSE的学校的教师对英国手语了解不足,这抑制了他们使用自发手势。解释(1)和(2)可能意味着对照学校儿童输入中的自发手势的潜在益处与SSE的任何潜在益处相匹配。我们建议,研究幼儿教育专业人员对手势的自发使用,以及他们的手势如何支持班级中所有儿童的语言学习,将是未来富有成效的研究领域。