Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10620/17741
Longitudinal Study: LSIC
Title: Celebrating young Indigenous Australian children’s speech and language competence
Authors: McLeod, S 
Verdon, S 
Bennetts Kneebone, L 
Publication Date: 2014
Pages: 118-131
Keywords: Indigenous Aboriginal
Children
Speech
Language
Communication
Abstract: World-wide it is important to recognize Indigenous children’s speech and language competence and their language learning environments. Indigenous Australian children participated in the child cohort of Footprints in Time: Longitudinal Study of Indigenous Children, a national study supported by Indigenous Australians and the Australian Government collected annually (in waves). There were 692 3–5-year-old children in wave 1, and two years later, 570 5–7-year-old children were in wave 3 (77.0% of children in wave 1 were also in wave 3). Data were obtained via parent interviews and direct assessment. The children spoke between one and eight languages including: English (wave 1: 91.2%, wave 3: 99.6%), Indigenous languages (wave 1: 24.4%, wave 3: 26.8%), creoles (wave 1: 11.5%, wave 3: 13.7%), foreign languages(non-Indigenous languages other than English) (wave 1: 2.0%, wave 3: 5.1%), and sign languages (wave 1:0.6%, wave 3: 0.4%). Children who spoke an Indigenous language were more likely to live in moderate to extreme isolation than their English-speaking counterparts. Parental concern about speech and language skills was similar to data for non-Indigenous children with approximately one quarter of parents expressing concern (wave 1: yes = 13.9%, a little = 10.4%). Children’s language environments were rich, with many family members and friends telling oral stories, reading books, and listening to the children read. Almost a third of families wanted to pass on their cultural language, and many indicated that they would like their child to learn an Indigenous language at school. Overall, Indigenous Australian children have rich cultural and linguistic traditions and their speech and language competence is promoted through family,community, and educational experiences.
URL: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0885200613000975
Keywords: Education and Training; Children -- Indigenous; Culture -- Culturally and Linguistically Diverse; Child Development -- Speech and Language
Research collection: Journal Articles
Appears in Collections:Journal Articles

Show full item record

Page view(s)

778
checked on Sep 27, 2023
Google icon

Google ScholarTM

Check


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.