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The Effect of Community Context on Intergenerational Spanish Maintenance and English Proficiency among Latina and Latino Children
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| Institution: | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign |
|---|---|
| Advisor(s): | Gillian Stevens |
| Degree: | Ph.D. Sociology |
| Year: | 1997 |
| Volume: | 200 pages |
| ISBN-10: | 158112001X |
| ISBN-13: | 9781581120011 |
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In this
dissertation I investigate how community context affects Spanish language use and English proficiency among Latina and Latino children in the United
States, focusing on the children of immigrants. I view children's language
attributes through a sociological perspective that recognizes that children
learn and use languages within specific social and cultural contexts, and
that these contexts have an important effect on language acquisition and
use. This theoretical perspective leads to the hypothesis that children's
language skills and language use will be affected by the communities they
live in. I predict that living in a metropolitan area with a greater propinquity
and availability of Spanish speakers will increase a child's likelihood
of speaking Spanish, because this will increase opportunities for using
and hearing Spanish and promote Spanish within a larger United States context
that often devalues languages other than English. At the same time, I hypothesize
that community context will have little effect on children's English skills
because of the ubiquitous presence of English in the daily life of any
U.S. child.
I test these hypotheses using a national sample of children who live in
metropolitan areas drawn from the 1990 Census. I find that levels of Spanish
maintenance are extremely high among children of Latina/o immigrants, and
that a large majority of children who are born in the U.S. speak English
fluently. Multivariate analysis demonstrates that several dimensions of
a metropolitan area's language context-in particular the saturation and
segregation of Spanish speakers-have a strong effect on second-generation
children's likelihood of speaking Spanish that persists even after controlling
for household- and individual-level variables. Contrary to my original
hypothesis, I also find that the language characteristics of the metropolitan
area have a significant effect on children's English proficiency. This
effect, however, is smaller than the effect of metropolitan context on
Spanish use.
This analysis produces a better understanding of the specific elements
of household and community context that affect language use. The results
imply that children of immigrants are following multiple paths to language
adaptation, and that metropolitan context is an important influence on
this process of adaptation.
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200 pages
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Size: 363k
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