Hablando at home: Examining the interactional resources of a bilingual autistic child

Abstract Daily language interactions predict child outcomes. For multilingual families who rear neurodiverse children and who may be minoritized for their language use, a dearth of research examines families’ daily language interactions. Utilizing a language socialization framework and a case study...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of child language pp. 1 - 23
Main Authors COHEN, S. R., WISHARD GUERRA, A., MIGUEL, J., BOTTEMA-BEUTEL, K., OLIVEIRA, G.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 30.10.2023
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Summary:Abstract Daily language interactions predict child outcomes. For multilingual families who rear neurodiverse children and who may be minoritized for their language use, a dearth of research examines families’ daily language interactions. Utilizing a language socialization framework and a case study methodology, 4,991 English and Spanish utterances from a 5-year old autistic child and his family were collected during naturally occurring interactions over 10 days. Utterances were analyzed for patterns of code-switching by speaker, activity setting, English or Spanish initial language, and code-switch function. Spanish was spoken in most activities. For reading, both languages were equally employed by the father. While participants used both languages across all activity settings, significant variations in code-switching type and function were observed by activity setting and speaker. We discuss implications for how home language resources can be integrated into autism interventions.
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content type line 23
ISSN:0305-0009
1469-7602
DOI:10.1017/S0305000923000600