Abstract

This article discusses a recent longitudinal study of four, Vietnamese‐speaking 4‐year‐olds' acquisition of English as a second language in a bilingual preschool over 1 year. The research examines the learners' English language output in interaction between the teacher and peers and identifies the key factors which influenced their development of English. A major feature of the learners' data was their dominant use of single words rather than reliance on chunked language. These single words provided the basis for later development of more complex utterances. Commonalities and substantial differences were documented between the learners in terms of the amount of English that was produced, the learners' approaches to interaction and their development of English.

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