The effect of dialogic reading on second language acquisition, output, and literacy of migrant students in early childhood
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Author
Barrow, JasmineKeyword
Literacy--Study and teaching (Preschool)--Case studies.Linguistic minorities---Education---New York (State).
Language acquisition
Children with immigrants--Education--New York (State), Western.
Date Published
2018-05
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This mixed research study addressed the research question: does dialogic reading influence migrant students' language output and literacy skills? The study was based in Western New York (WNY) and was conducted in an agriculture-based migrant center. The participants of the study were 4 years of age and were both female and male. The current literature indicated that the use of comprehensible input is beneficial to the language output of English language learners (ELLs) in both the home language and the target language. The data was collected through a series of interviews and observations using anecdotal notes and an interview protocol. The compiled data was analyzed and reported through themes and visual graphs which indicated that there was a positive correlation between the use of dialogic reading and the increased output of the target language, English. [from author's abstract]Description
1 online resource (59 pages) : color illustrations.Collections
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- Creative Commons
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States