Gender differences were analyzed across countries of origin and continents, and across mother tongues and language families, using a large-scale database, containing information on 27,119 adult learners of Dutch as a second language. Female learners consistently outperformed male learners in speaking and writing proficiency in Dutch as a second language. This gender gap remained remarkably robust and constant when other learner characteristics were taken into account, such as education, age of arrival, length of residence and hours studying Dutch. For reading and listening skills in Dutch, no gender gap was found. In addition, we found a general gender by education effect for all four language skills in Dutch for speaking, writing, reading, and listening. Female language learners turned out to profit more from higher educational training than male learners do in adult second language acquisition. These findings do not seem to match nurture-oriented explanatory frameworks based for instance on a human capital approach or gender-specific acculturation processes. Rather, they seem to corroborate a nature-based, gene-environment correlational framework in which language proficiency being a genetically-influenced ability interacting with environmental factors such as motivation, orientation, education, and learner strategies that still mediate between endowment and acquiring language proficiency at an adult stage.
This study reports on the impact of 11 West European first languages on the acquisition of Dutch. Using data from nearly 6,000 second-language learners, it was found that the mother tongue had a rather large impact on two language skills—namely, oral and written proficiency—as measured by the scores received by these learners on the State Examination of Dutch as a Second Language. Multilevel analyses showed that the effect of the mother tongue can adequately be modeled by means of the cognate linguistic distance measure, adopted from McMahon and McMahon (2005). The explanative power of the genetic linguistic distance measure (Cavalli-Sforza, Menozzi, & Piazza, 1994), on the other hand, was rather poor. Additionally, learner characteristics (age of arrival, length of residence, hours studying Dutch, education, and gender) and context characteristics (quality of schooling in the country of origin and multilingual country of origin) explained part of the variation in Dutch speaking and writing skills.
The relative e¡ects of both parents' educational levels on their child-rearing values were examined by analysing data from a sample of Dutch families (N¼589).This research focuses upon dominance of fathers over mothers with respect to the value placed on children's conformity to parental rules.We argue that for this kind of research 'diagonal reference models' are preferred. Application of these models shows asymmetric patterns of in£uence, i.e.'male dominance': wives' child-rearing values are more in line with their husband's educational level than with own educational attainment. Mothers'adjustment is even more pronounced in the case of family con£ict. Notes: see Figure 1 for model speci¢cations. p50.05; ** p50.01.
Three groups of 10 age- and sex-matched nondiabetic volunteers took 0, 750, or 1500 mg of vitamin C each day for 12 weeks. Glycohemoglobin (GHb) was measured by HPLC, electrophoresis, affinity chromatography, and immunoassay at baseline (-4 weeks and -1 day), during supplementation (6 weeks and 12 weeks), and after supplementation ended (6 and 12 weeks). Plasma vitamin C increased twofold during supplementation but, in contrast with the results of Davie et al. (Diabetes 1992; 41:167-73), there were no between-group differences in GHb, glucose, and fructosamine concentrations. Fructosamine may have increased with storage time. The net effects of vitamin C on absolute GHb at 12 weeks vs -1 day (and at 12 weeks vs 12 weeks after) in % GHb amounted to: HPLC -0.035 (-0.050); electrophoresis +0.005 (+0.035); affinity chromatography -0.070 (+0.015); and immunoassay -0.110 (+0.025). We conclude that supplementation of nondiabetics with 750 or 1500 mg of vitamin C daily for 12 weeks does not cause interference in GHb determinations by HPLC, electrophoresis, affinity chromatography, or immunoassay, and does not reduce in vivo Hb glycation.
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