Children's Language-Based Pedagogical Preferences in a Multilingual Society

A majority of the world's population is multilingual, yet children's language-based preferences have largely been studied in Western monolingual contexts. The present research investigated language-based preferences in 4- to 8-year-old children living in Hyderabad, India, a multilingual re...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental psychology. General 2024-12, Vol.153 (12), p.2951-2961
Hauptverfasser: Bashyam, Sharanya, Colomer, Marc, Santhanagopalan, Radhika, Kinzler, Katherine D., Woodward, Amanda
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A majority of the world's population is multilingual, yet children's language-based preferences have largely been studied in Western monolingual contexts. The present research investigated language-based preferences in 4- to 8-year-old children living in Hyderabad, India, a multilingual region with languages such as Telugu (official language of the state, and the native language of many children in the state) and English (medium of instruction in some schools). We presented to children novel objects and probed their selective preference to learn from different speakers (Telugu, British-accented English, or Indian-accented English). In addition, the current study assessed the flexibility of children's preferences by manipulating the learning goal (i.e., performance goal vs. enjoyment goal) and learning content (i.e., Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics [STEM] objects vs. cultural objects). Children showed a preference for both English speakers over Telugu speakers, a tendency that increased with age. This preference was especially pronounced for performance learning goals and for STEM learning content. Furthermore, children whose native language was Telugu showed a less pronounced English bias. The results of this study provide new insights into the development of language-based biases in multilingual environments. First, they highlight dual and intersecting considerations of speaker familiarity and speaker status in guiding children's choices about from whom to learn. Second, the results suggest that children's language-based preferences in a pedagogical setting are flexible, as children integrate social cues (e.g., language-based attitudes) as well as contextual cues (e.g., the learning goal) strategically. Public Significance StatementIn a rich multilingual society like India, we find nuance in children's reasoning about language. Our results demonstrate that children prefer to learn from English speakers, over local language speakers. This preference is modulated by the learning goal, learning content, and the child's native language. These findings suggest dual and intersecting considerations of speaker familiarity and speaker status in guiding children's choices about from whom to learn.
ISSN:0096-3445
1939-2222
DOI:10.1037/xge0001497