Interdependence between L1 and L2: The case of Syrian children with refugee backgrounds in Canada and the Netherlands
Date
2021
Authors
Blom, Elma
Soto-Corominas, Adriana
Attar, Zahraa
Daskalaki, Evangelia
Paradis, Johanne
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Abstract
Children who are refugees become bilingual in circumstances that are often challenging
and that can vary across national contexts. We investigated the second language (L2) syntactic skills of Syrian children aged 6-12 living in Canada (n = 56) and the Netherlands
(n = 47). Our goal was to establish the impact of the first language (L1 = Syrian
Arabic) skills on L2 (English, Dutch) outcomes and whether L1–L2 interdependence is
influenced by the length of L2 exposure. To measure L1 and L2 syntactic skills, cross-
linguistic Litmus Sentence Repetition Tasks (Litmus-SRTs) were used. Results showed evidence of L1–L2 interdependence, but interdependence may only surface after sufficient
L2 exposure. Maternal education level and refugee camp experiences differed between
the two samples. Both variables impacted L2 outcomes in the Canadian but not in the
Dutch sample, demonstrating the importance to examine refugee children’s bilingual
language development in different national contexts.
Description
Publication from CYRRC-funded project, "Successes and Challenges of Child who are Syrian Refugees: Language Literacy and Learning."
Keywords
Citation
Blom, E., Soto-Corominas, A., Daskalaki, E., Attar, Z., & Paradis, J. (2021). Interdependence between L1 and L2: the case of Syrian children with refugee backgrounds in Canada and the Netherlands. Applied Psycholinguistics, 42, 1159–1194. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0142716421000229