Page 209 - Second language development of newly arrived migrant kindergarteners - Frederike Groothoff
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General discussion and conclusions 209 Richness). For macrostructure, we looked at Story Structure, Structural Complexity, and Internal State Terms. The main findings were as follows: Age was significant for five of the six measurements of narrative development. o For Number of Different Words, the Guiraud Index Score, and Internal State Terms the development was linear; each month a child grew older his or her stories contained more diverse words and also contained more terms about mental states and feelings of the story characters. o For the Measure of Lexical Richness and Story Structure there was growth over time, but the rate of growth is greater for younger pupils than for older pupils. Exposure to Dutch at School had an effect on all language measures except for Internal State Terms. o For Number of Different Words, Guiraud Index Score, Measure of Lexical Richness, and Story Structure there was a fixed effect of exposure to Dutch at School: the longer a pupil attended a Dutch school, the more lexically diverse, lexically rich, and structured his or her storytelling. o For Story Structure there was an interaction between age and exposure to Dutch: the influence of exposure to Dutch at school was larger for younger pupils than for older pupils. Comparisons of scores on measures of narrative ability of pupils who attended DL2- schools with the scores of pupils who attended mainstream schools showed no difference, except for an interaction effect between Age and Number of Different Words: for younger pupils the effect of educational facility on lexical diversity was larger than for older pupils. 9.2.3 The school learning environment Focusing on teacher behavior In Chapter 6 the aim was to investigate the pedagogical practices in the classroom focusing on teacher behavior. To investigate this, the Classroom Assessment Scoring System (CLASS; Pianta, La Paro, & Hamre, 2008) was used to measure the quality of several dimensions of teacher-child interactions in the different classrooms. The main findings were: Overall, the teachers from both school types in this study showed a pattern in their scores over the ten dimensions of CLASS which was in accordance with results of previous national and international studies23: higher scores on the Emotional Support 23 cf. Mashburn, Justice, Downer, & Pianta, 2009; Pakarinen et al., 2010; Leseman & Veen, 2016; Henrichs & Leseman, 2016; Veen et al., 2017.