Abstract

Recent proposals suggest that timing in acquisition, i.e., the age at which a phenomenon is mastered by monolingual children, influences acquisition of the L2, interacting with age of onset of bilingualism and amount of L2 input. Here, we examine whether timing affects acquisition of the bilingual child’s heritage language, possibly modulating the effects of environmental and child-internal factors. The performance of 6- to 12-year-old Greek heritage children residing in Germany (age of onset of German: 0–4 years) was assessed across a range of nine syntactic structures via the Greek LITMUS (Language Impairment Testing in Multilingual Settings) Sentence Repetition Task. Based on previous studies on monolingual Greek, the structures were classified as “early” (main clauses (SVO), coordination, clitics, complement clauses, sentential negation, non-referential wh-questions) or as “late” (referential wh-questions, relatives, adverbial clauses). Current family use of Greek and formal instruction in Greek (environmental), chronological age, and age of onset of German (child-internal) were assessed via the Questionnaire for Parents of Bilingual Children (PABIQ); short-term memory (child-internal) was measured via forward digit recall. Children’s scores were generally higher for early than for late acquired structures. Performance on the three early structures with the highest scores was predicted by the amount of current family use of Greek. Performance on the three late structures was additionally predicted by forward digit recall, indicating that higher short-term memory capacity is beneficial for correctly reconstructing structurally complex sentences. We suggest that the understanding of heritage language development and the role of child-internal and environmental factors will benefit from a consideration of timing in the acquisition of the different structures.

Highlights

  • There is a general consensus that sentence repetition tasks (SRTs) provide a reliable measure of bilingual children’s overall language ability

  • With regard to (Q1), i.e., whether timing in monolingual acquisition affects how children master the respective early and late structures in their heritage language Greek, our results suggest the presence of partial effects

  • Significant differences, were only found for sentence coordination (COOR), which was easier than the late structures adverbial clauses (ADV) and relative clauses (RC)

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Summary

Introduction

There is a general consensus that sentence repetition tasks (SRTs) provide a reliable measure of bilingual children’s overall language ability. Among the phenomena that have received particular attention are grammatical gender, case marking, verbal inflection, and vocabulary, as well as overall morphosyntactic ability, which was typically measured via SRTs. In the following, we summarize previous studies that address the factors relevant to the current study (internal: CA, L2-AoO, STM; environmental: HL exposure and use) and discuss whether they speak to timing, i.e., the earliness or lateness of the phenomena under investigation. (Q2) To which extent do child-internal (chronological age, AoO of the L2, short-term memory) and environmental (current use of HL in the family, current weekly hours of HL instruction) factors account for children’s performance in the SR structures, and does timing in acquisition interact with these factors?

The Present Study
Participant Information
Materials
Data Analysis
Predictors of SRT Performance and Their Interaction with Timing
Discussion and Conclusions
Full Text
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