Double threshold in bi- and multilingual contexts: preconditions for higher academic attainment in English as an additional language

Bi- and multilingualism has been shown to have positive effects on the attainment of third and additional languages. These effects, however, depend on the type of bi- and multilingualism and the status of the languages involved (Cenoz, 2003; Jessner, 2006). In this exploratory trend study, we revisi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inFrontiers in psychology Vol. 5; p. 546
Main Authors Lechner, Simone, Siemund, Peter
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 05.06.2014
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Summary:Bi- and multilingualism has been shown to have positive effects on the attainment of third and additional languages. These effects, however, depend on the type of bi- and multilingualism and the status of the languages involved (Cenoz, 2003; Jessner, 2006). In this exploratory trend study, we revisit Cummins' Threshold Hypothesis (1979), claiming that bilingual children must reach certain levels of attainment in order to (a) avoid academic deficits and (b) allow bilingualism to have a positive effect on their cognitive development and academic attainment. To this end, we examine the attainment of English as an academic language of 16-years-old school children from Hamburg (n = 52). Our findings support the existence of thresholds for literacy attainment. We argue that language external factors may override positive effects of bilingualism. In addition, these factors may compensate negative effects attributable to low literacy attainment in German and the heritage languages. We also show that low attainment levels in migrant children's heritage languages preempt high literacy attainment in additional languages.
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This article was submitted to Language Sciences, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology.
Reviewed by: Dorothea Hoffmann, University of Chicago, USA; Jeff MacSwan, University of Maryland, USA
Edited by: Mary Grantham O'Brien, University of Calgary, Canada
ISSN:1664-1078
1664-1078
DOI:10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00546