The acquisition of English and Mandarin by a Singaporean child in a trilingual home

This study investigated patterns of acquisition of English and Mandarin by a Singaporean child who has been raised in a code-switching type of speech environment. The relation of code-switching to the acquisition of bilingualism was analyzed too. The speech of the subject, a 23-month-old boy in a mi...

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Main Author: Teo, Jennifer Lay Heong.
Other Authors: Lim, Audrey
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/20322
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-203222020-11-01T06:27:10Z The acquisition of English and Mandarin by a Singaporean child in a trilingual home Teo, Jennifer Lay Heong. Lim, Audrey National Institute of Education DRNTU::Social sciences::Education::Language and education This study investigated patterns of acquisition of English and Mandarin by a Singaporean child who has been raised in a code-switching type of speech environment. The relation of code-switching to the acquisition of bilingualism was analyzed too. The speech of the subject, a 23-month-old boy in a middle class trilingual family, was recorded.and analyzed for seven months. Results indicate that: (1)the absence of tense and number markers in the English data was due to the variety of Singapore Colloquial English the child was exposed to in his environment; (2)the use of pragmatic particles and the lack of clear developmental pattern in the English interrogatives were linked to the Singapore Colloquial English usage in the input; (3)the English-language acquisition pattern shows a similar pattern as those in other comparable studies done in Singapore; (4)the order of the grammatical morphemes in the Mandarin data follows the similar pattern as other monolingual children reported on; (5)code-switching and code-mixing were directly affected by social factors: interlocutor, norm of the speech situation and his language dominance; (6)code-switching also occurs for many reasons related to language use; and (7)the child language development has been affected by the varying amount of input. The study concluded that code-switching did not lead to any negative consequences, but on the contrary, seems to be the only viable means of developing bilingualism in Singapore, where multilingualism is a norm and code-switching is an integral part of the single complex culture. Master of Education 2009-12-14T09:34:15Z 2009-12-14T09:34:15Z 1998 1998 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10356/20322 en NANYANG TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY 191 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Education::Language and education
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Education::Language and education
Teo, Jennifer Lay Heong.
The acquisition of English and Mandarin by a Singaporean child in a trilingual home
description This study investigated patterns of acquisition of English and Mandarin by a Singaporean child who has been raised in a code-switching type of speech environment. The relation of code-switching to the acquisition of bilingualism was analyzed too. The speech of the subject, a 23-month-old boy in a middle class trilingual family, was recorded.and analyzed for seven months. Results indicate that: (1)the absence of tense and number markers in the English data was due to the variety of Singapore Colloquial English the child was exposed to in his environment; (2)the use of pragmatic particles and the lack of clear developmental pattern in the English interrogatives were linked to the Singapore Colloquial English usage in the input; (3)the English-language acquisition pattern shows a similar pattern as those in other comparable studies done in Singapore; (4)the order of the grammatical morphemes in the Mandarin data follows the similar pattern as other monolingual children reported on; (5)code-switching and code-mixing were directly affected by social factors: interlocutor, norm of the speech situation and his language dominance; (6)code-switching also occurs for many reasons related to language use; and (7)the child language development has been affected by the varying amount of input. The study concluded that code-switching did not lead to any negative consequences, but on the contrary, seems to be the only viable means of developing bilingualism in Singapore, where multilingualism is a norm and code-switching is an integral part of the single complex culture.
author2 Lim, Audrey
author_facet Lim, Audrey
Teo, Jennifer Lay Heong.
format Theses and Dissertations
author Teo, Jennifer Lay Heong.
author_sort Teo, Jennifer Lay Heong.
title The acquisition of English and Mandarin by a Singaporean child in a trilingual home
title_short The acquisition of English and Mandarin by a Singaporean child in a trilingual home
title_full The acquisition of English and Mandarin by a Singaporean child in a trilingual home
title_fullStr The acquisition of English and Mandarin by a Singaporean child in a trilingual home
title_full_unstemmed The acquisition of English and Mandarin by a Singaporean child in a trilingual home
title_sort acquisition of english and mandarin by a singaporean child in a trilingual home
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/20322
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