Word reading in monolingual and bilingual children with developmental language disorder
Publication date
2022-08
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Abstract
Many children with developmental language disorder (DLD) are reported to have word reading difficulties. However, previous research has focused mostly on monolingual children. The present study used two existing datasets to assess word reading outcomes of bilingual children with DLD. In Study 1, we compared word reading outcomes of monolingual and bilingual children with and without DLD (n = 93 monolingual DLD; n = 33 bilingual DLD, n = 42 monolingual TD; n = 74 bilingual TD). In Study 2, we compared those of monolingual (n = 91) and bilingual children with DLD (n = 51) on the basis of school record data. Findings from both studies show mean poor word reading outcomes and a high incidence of poor readers in the groups of children with DLD. Despite lower oral language outcomes of bilingual children in the mainstream language, reading outcomes of monolingual and bilingual children (with/without DLD) did not differ or outcomes were even better for the bilingual children. Overall, these findings indicate that DLD is a risk factor for word reading difficulties, while bilingualism is not.
Keywords
Developmental language disorder, Word reading, Bilingualism, SDG 4 - Quality Education
Citation
de Bree, E, Boerma, T, Hakvoort, B, Blom, E & van den Boer, M 2022, 'Word reading in monolingual and bilingual children with developmental language disorder', Learning and Individual Differences, vol. 98, 102185. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lindif.2022.102185