Abstract

This article analyzes the narratives of immigrant parents, describing their preschool children's bilingual development and their own involvement in it. The analyses found parents' lay theories (i.e., general reasoning about children's bilingual development) woven into the narratives. The parents used these theories to explain and justify their own language ideologies (aims, plans, and expectations concerning their children's bilingual development), language practices (parent–child language communication), and language management (ways of regulating the children's bilingual development). This pilot study was based on semi-structured interviews with 4 families (8 parents). The results show that the parents constructed their language theories based on self-evident truths; they reasoned as sociolinguists, focusing on external environmental and social factors, but ignored the child's personal characteristics. The parents viewed their children's Hebrew–Russian bilingualism as obligatory, rather than as an elite privilege. They believed in the tremendous power of early language acquisition and, based on this belief, constructed plans for managing their children's bilingual development, which were not always coherent or consistent with scientific data.

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