Bilingualism Hindering Language Development

1245 Words3 Pages

Being bilingual is usually viewed as a clear advantage in todays’ society, and it is often highly preferred in the workforce and in other domains. However, currently there is some contention in regards to bilingualism hindering language development and this could have serious implications. Language can determine what academic curriculum a child is categorized into and this can have a great impact in a person’s academic career and consequentially in life. Students with a lower vocabulary of the English language are often put into remedial courses and often miss out on what others are learning, and this puts them further behind and this becomes a perpetual cycle (Carlo et al., 2004). Although some contend that the language development/acquisition …show more content…

Therefore I think that bilingualism does hinder language development and measures should be taken to bridge the gap between monolinguals and those learning a second language to create equal opportunity.
Assessing and comparing the acquisition of vocabulary between two groups, although not comprehensive, is an accepted measure of the language development and in a one study the results showed that monolinguals, “had larger English vocabularies than did the children with two native Spanish speaking parents” (Hoff et al., 2014). In this particular study, children were tracked and assessed from the age of two to four years old utilizing the MacArthur-Bates Inventories for English and Spanish. The researchers found that English spoken at home was a good predictor of better performing on the test because the monolingual children knew more vocabulary than bilingual children. Hoff et al. (2014) noted that, bilingual children’s language growth for each language was actually delayed because bilingual children hear less of each language compared to monolingual children who are exposed to the same …show more content…

It is great that bilinguals are able to achieve proficiency of a second language (English in this case), but they are at a great disadvantage when compared to monolinguals because learning two languages delays the developmental process. In about five years bilinguals are able to achieve academic proficiency, but at that stage their monolingual classmates are much more advanced. This study compared bilingual students with native English speakers using picture vocabulary tests, and English grammar tests; they collected data from two San Francisco/Bay area schools and two schools in Canada; their findings revealed, “a continuing and widening gap between English-learners (EL) students and native English speakers” (Hakula et al., 2000). This study recognized that there were different poverty levels in the schools that they collected their samples from especially in the Bay Area schools, however they also controlled for SES by comparing the bilingual students to monolinguals of the same SES. Additionally, what was most surprising about this study was that in the third grade bilingual students were only a year behind their monolingual classmates inn basic reading, but by the fifth grade bilinguals were two

Open Document