Receptive Vocabulary and Listening Narrative Comprehension of Italian–English Bilingual Children between 5 to 7 Years

Vocabulary is the key component of listening narrative comprehension, but its contribution has been scarcely investigated in bilingual children. This study aimed to examine (a) listening narrative comprehension and receptive vocabulary in L1 (Italian) and L2 (English) in preschool and first grade ch...

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Published in:Education Sciences
Main Authors: Maja Roch, Raffaele Dicataldo, Maria Chiara Levorato
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2023-08-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/13/8/780
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author Maja Roch
Raffaele Dicataldo
Maria Chiara Levorato
author_facet Maja Roch
Raffaele Dicataldo
Maria Chiara Levorato
author_sort Maja Roch
collection DOAJ
container_title Education Sciences
description Vocabulary is the key component of listening narrative comprehension, but its contribution has been scarcely investigated in bilingual children. This study aimed to examine (a) listening narrative comprehension and receptive vocabulary in L1 (Italian) and L2 (English) in preschool and first grade children; (b) the specific contribution of receptive vocabulary to listening narrative comprehension in both languages. Participants were 30 preschoolers and 32 first graders, who are all Italian children attending an international school in English. In both languages, receptive vocabulary was assessed through PPVT-R and listening narrative comprehension through TOR 3-8. The results showed that listening narrative comprehension was age appropriate in both languages but higher in L1. Lower vocabulary in L1 than L2 was found, and this difference is higher for preschoolers than for first grades; finally, two regressions performed on listening narrative comprehension in each language showed that only vocabulary in the same language accounted for listening narrative comprehension. Children obtain higher performance in L1; however, after a few years of L2 exposure in the educational context, language skills fall within the normal range, with some weakness in vocabulary. Vocabulary contribution to listening narrative comprehension is similar in both languages and specific for each.
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spelling doaj-art-e15f88264d5b4164bd6dbd287a1106f82025-08-20T01:01:46ZengMDPI AGEducation Sciences2227-71022023-08-0113878010.3390/educsci13080780Receptive Vocabulary and Listening Narrative Comprehension of Italian–English Bilingual Children between 5 to 7 YearsMaja Roch0Raffaele Dicataldo1Maria Chiara Levorato2Department of Developmental Psychology and Socialization, University of Padua, 35131 Padua, ItalyDepartment of Developmental Psychology and Socialization, University of Padua, 35131 Padua, ItalyDepartment of Developmental Psychology and Socialization, University of Padua, 35131 Padua, ItalyVocabulary is the key component of listening narrative comprehension, but its contribution has been scarcely investigated in bilingual children. This study aimed to examine (a) listening narrative comprehension and receptive vocabulary in L1 (Italian) and L2 (English) in preschool and first grade children; (b) the specific contribution of receptive vocabulary to listening narrative comprehension in both languages. Participants were 30 preschoolers and 32 first graders, who are all Italian children attending an international school in English. In both languages, receptive vocabulary was assessed through PPVT-R and listening narrative comprehension through TOR 3-8. The results showed that listening narrative comprehension was age appropriate in both languages but higher in L1. Lower vocabulary in L1 than L2 was found, and this difference is higher for preschoolers than for first grades; finally, two regressions performed on listening narrative comprehension in each language showed that only vocabulary in the same language accounted for listening narrative comprehension. Children obtain higher performance in L1; however, after a few years of L2 exposure in the educational context, language skills fall within the normal range, with some weakness in vocabulary. Vocabulary contribution to listening narrative comprehension is similar in both languages and specific for each.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/13/8/780receptive vocabularylistening narrative comprehensionbilingualsschool readiness
spellingShingle Maja Roch
Raffaele Dicataldo
Maria Chiara Levorato
Receptive Vocabulary and Listening Narrative Comprehension of Italian–English Bilingual Children between 5 to 7 Years
receptive vocabulary
listening narrative comprehension
bilinguals
school readiness
title Receptive Vocabulary and Listening Narrative Comprehension of Italian–English Bilingual Children between 5 to 7 Years
title_full Receptive Vocabulary and Listening Narrative Comprehension of Italian–English Bilingual Children between 5 to 7 Years
title_fullStr Receptive Vocabulary and Listening Narrative Comprehension of Italian–English Bilingual Children between 5 to 7 Years
title_full_unstemmed Receptive Vocabulary and Listening Narrative Comprehension of Italian–English Bilingual Children between 5 to 7 Years
title_short Receptive Vocabulary and Listening Narrative Comprehension of Italian–English Bilingual Children between 5 to 7 Years
title_sort receptive vocabulary and listening narrative comprehension of italian english bilingual children between 5 to 7 years
topic receptive vocabulary
listening narrative comprehension
bilinguals
school readiness
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/13/8/780
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AT raffaeledicataldo receptivevocabularyandlisteningnarrativecomprehensionofitalianenglishbilingualchildrenbetween5to7years
AT mariachiaralevorato receptivevocabularyandlisteningnarrativecomprehensionofitalianenglishbilingualchildrenbetween5to7years