2022
DOI: 10.1093/applin/amac025
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Evaluating Bilingual Children’s Native Language Abilities in Côte d’Ivoire: Introducing the Ivorian Children’s Language Assessment Toolkit for Attié, Abidji, and Baoulé

Abstract: Few standardized language assessments are adapted to different cultural and linguistic contexts to assess children’s first language (L1) abilities. We introduce the Ivorian Children’s Language Assessment Toolkit for measuring phonological awareness, vocabulary, oral comprehension, and tone awareness in the Abidji, Attié, and Baoulé languages of Côte d’Ivoire. Six hundred and three primary-school children (age 4–14) completed language assessments in their L1 and French. The toolkit provided a reliable and compr… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Overall, 73% of CE1 (Grade 3) students master less than half of the target language, literacy, and mathematics skills for their grade level (UNESCO, 2016). This academic achievement gap is the widest for children in rural areas (UNESCO, 2016), where a high percentage of children cannot read (Ball et al, 2022;Jasińska et al, 2022;Sobers et al, under review). Importantly, rural areas are among the poorest regions in Côte d'Ivoire, and children in these regions may be particularly vulnerable to the negative impact of low-resource environments on educational outcomes.…”
Section: Ses and Literacy In Lmicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Overall, 73% of CE1 (Grade 3) students master less than half of the target language, literacy, and mathematics skills for their grade level (UNESCO, 2016). This academic achievement gap is the widest for children in rural areas (UNESCO, 2016), where a high percentage of children cannot read (Ball et al, 2022;Jasińska et al, 2022;Sobers et al, under review). Importantly, rural areas are among the poorest regions in Côte d'Ivoire, and children in these regions may be particularly vulnerable to the negative impact of low-resource environments on educational outcomes.…”
Section: Ses and Literacy In Lmicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Children's literacy skills were measured using timed letter, word, and nonword reading subtests in the French language version of the EGRA (Ball et al, 2022;Jasińska et al, 2022), previously used in Senegal (Gove & Wetterberg, 2011;RTI International, 2015). Before beginning each subtest, children were given a practice trial where the experimenter provided feedback and scaffolding.…”
Section: Literacy Measuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This developmental pathway from oral language to emergent literacy to literacy is more complicated in a second language (L2), where oral language competency, phonological processing ability, and print knowledge arise at different times and vary widely between populations (August & Shanahan, 2006;Chan & Sylva, 2015), and the relative importance of these oral and print skills in both first (L1) and second language (L2) for L2 literacy change with age (Jasińska et al, 2019). Particularly in low-income, agricultural communities like rural Côte d'Ivoire, many emergent readers are still acquiring basic oral and print L2 French in middle-and late-childhood, from a diverse set of L1s and L1 phonological abilities (Akpé et al, 2021;Jasińska et al, 2022). Therefore generalizations about the skills that underlie childhood literacy could be greatly improved by experimental paradigms that can be applied across children from many L1s and L2s, with varying exposure to print and varying ages of acquisition, i.e., non-linguistic tasks which offer insights on individual differences in linguistic outcomes (such as literacy).…”
Section: Statistical Learning In Ivorian Primary Schoolsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Notably, these results emphasize the importance of evaluating children's learning in all of their languages. Indeed, evaluating children's language skills in both languages is a more comprehensive indicator of children's true language abilities in multilingual West African contexts (Jasińska et al, 2022).…”
Section: Nigermentioning
confidence: 99%