Home Support for Bilingual Development of Turkish 4-6-year-old Immigrant Children in the Netherlands: Efficacy of a Home-based Educational Programme

In view of the political and practical difficulties encountered in realising bilingual education for young language minority children, the present study - a secondary analysis of data from a more comprehensive study - reconsiders the role of parents in providing cognitively challenging first languag...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of multilingual and multicultural development Vol. 22; no. 4; pp. 309 - 324
Main Authors Leseman, P.P.M., Van Tuijl, C.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Taylor & Francis Group 2001
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Summary:In view of the political and practical difficulties encountered in realising bilingual education for young language minority children, the present study - a secondary analysis of data from a more comprehensive study - reconsiders the role of parents in providing cognitively challenging first language contexts. The study reports the results of an intensive two-year home-based educational programme for 4-6-year old Turkish minority children in The Netherlands. The mothers who worked with their children at home carried out the structured programme in Turkish. There were modest but statistically significant effects on general cognitive and pre-mathematic skills tested in Dutch, on Turkish vocabulary, and as a trend but not statistically significant on Turkish syntactic skill. There were no effects on Dutch vocabulary and Dutch syntactic skill. Overall the results indicate that involving parents in their children's education through a structured home-based educational programme may add to the effects of preschool education. It may be a means to promote balanced bilingual development and to avoid first language loss.
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ISSN:0143-4632
1747-7557
DOI:10.1080/01434630108666438