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Special Issue In Memoriam: Adele MiccioEdited by: Thomas W. Powell, Martin J. Ball & Nicole Müller

Does reading in shallow L1 orthography slow attrition of language-specific morphological structures?

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Pages 401-415 | Received 28 Jul 2009, Accepted 25 Nov 2009, Published online: 26 Mar 2010
 

Abstract

This study looks at the relationship between L1 (Russian) attrition and L1 reading ability in Russian–English-speaking bilingual children. Ten Russian–English bilingual children and 10 adults participated in this study. Nine out of 10 children participants were born in the US and used L1 as their primary language of interaction within the family, but the intensity and the length of uninterrupted L1 exposure differed for each child. All participants were tested on perception (grammaticality judgement) and production (narrative) tasks to assess their sensitivity to and retention of the morphosyntactic structure of L1. All children showed some attrition of grammatical morphemes, specifically in the Russian systems of declension and conjugation; however, the degree of attrition correlated with reading ability in L1, i.e. children with L1 reading skills showed a lesser degree of attrition for some language-specific morphosyntactic structures. This finding shows interdependence of oral and reading skills and points to the role reading in language with shallow orthography may play in preservation of L1 grammatical structures in oral language. The implications for the clinical applications are also discussed.

Declaration of interest: The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

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