E Pluribus Unum: Bilingualism and Language Loss in the Second Generation

Labor eJournal Pub Date : 1998-03-01 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.121374
A. Portes, Lingxin Hao
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引用次数: 39

Abstract

We examine patterns of language adaption in a sample of over 5,000 second generation students in South Florida and Southern California. Knowledge of English is near universal and preference for that language is dominant among most immigrant nationalities. On the other hand, only a minority remain fluent in the parental languages and there are wide variations among immigrant groups in the extent of their parental linguistic retention. These variations are important for theory and policy because they affect the speed of acculturation and the extent to which sizable pools of fluent bilinguals will be created by today's second generation. We employ multivariate and multi-level analyses to identify the principal factors accounting for variation in foreign language maintenance and bilingualism. While a number of variables emerge as significant predictors, they do not account for differences across immigrant nationalities which become even more sharply delineated. A clear disjunture exists between children of Asian and Hispanic backgrounds whose parental language maintenance and bilingual fluency vary significantly. Reasons for this divergence are explored and their policy implications are discussed.
合众一体:第二代双语与语言丧失
我们对南佛罗里达和南加州的5000多名第二代学生的语言适应模式进行了研究。英语知识几乎是普遍的,对英语的偏好在大多数移民国家中占主导地位。另一方面,只有少数人能流利地使用母语,移民群体之间在保留母语的程度上存在很大差异。这些变化对理论和政策都很重要,因为它们影响着文化适应的速度,也影响着今天的第二代人能在多大程度上培养出大批流利的双语者。我们采用多变量和多层次的分析来确定外语维持和双语性变化的主要因素。虽然许多变量作为重要的预测因素出现,但它们并不能解释移民国籍之间的差异,这种差异变得更加明显。亚裔和西班牙裔背景的孩子之间存在明显的差异,他们父母的语言维持和双语流利程度有显著差异。本文探讨了这种差异的原因,并讨论了其政策含义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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