2018
DOI: 10.1002/rrq.220
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Investigating Linguistically Diverse Adolescents’ Literacy Trajectories Using Latent Transition Modeling

Abstract: This study examined the literacy profiles of students from diverse home‐language backgrounds and tracked those profiles from grade 6 to grade 10. The authors also investigated the predictive relations of students’ immigration background, gender, and participation in two instructional programs. The results from latent class and latent transition analyses suggest that grade 6 literacy profiles are strong predictors of literacy profiles in grade 10. Students from diverse home‐language backgrounds and those who ha… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 108 publications
(131 reference statements)
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“…Moreover, interdependence is heightened in rich sociocultural contexts, for example, classrooms, that value bilingualism and support acquisition of all spoken languages, such as Canadian FI contexts (Genesee & Fortune, 2014). Fewer studies have examined transfer effects in multilingual children (Bérubé & Marinova-Todd, 2012;Bourgoin & Dicks, 2019;Hipfner-Boucher et al, 2014;Haeni-Hoti et al, 2011;Sinclair et al, 2019;Thibault & Matheson, 2020; for a review, see Prevoo et al, 2016). Subsequently, more empirical evidence is needed to reveal how these relationships develop longitudinally as bilingual and multilingual children further improve their L2 and L3 skills.…”
Section: Theoretical Framework For Reading Comprehension In Multiling...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, interdependence is heightened in rich sociocultural contexts, for example, classrooms, that value bilingualism and support acquisition of all spoken languages, such as Canadian FI contexts (Genesee & Fortune, 2014). Fewer studies have examined transfer effects in multilingual children (Bérubé & Marinova-Todd, 2012;Bourgoin & Dicks, 2019;Hipfner-Boucher et al, 2014;Haeni-Hoti et al, 2011;Sinclair et al, 2019;Thibault & Matheson, 2020; for a review, see Prevoo et al, 2016). Subsequently, more empirical evidence is needed to reveal how these relationships develop longitudinally as bilingual and multilingual children further improve their L2 and L3 skills.…”
Section: Theoretical Framework For Reading Comprehension In Multiling...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nonetheless, we acknowledge that this result may have been confounded by students’ socioeconomic status, which was not controlled for in the current study. In fact, Sinclair et al. (2019) pointed out an important sociopolitical factor, Canada’s selective immigration policy, as a plausible explanation of higher achievement among immigrant students.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During the G3 and G6 EQAO literacy assessment administrations, students were asked to complete a questionnaire that included two questions about home language environment: “In which language(s) do people speak to you at home?” and “Which language(s) do you speak at home?” with options of “only English,” “mostly English,” “another language(s) as often as English,” “mostly another language(s),” or “only another language(s).” To be consistent with the classification and notations used by Jang et al. (2013) and Sinclair et al. (2019), students’ home language status was coded in this paper as language(s) heard at home followed by language(s) spoken at home ; for example, EnEn (English–English) means hearing mostly or only English and speaking mostly or only English, and OtEq (Other–Equal) means hearing mostly or only another language(s) and speaking both English and the other language(s) equally.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 97%
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