학술논문

Cognitive Advantage in Children Enrolled in a Second-Language Immersion Elementary School Program for Three Years
Document Type
Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Source
Bilingualism: Language and Cognition. Jul 2013 16(3):597-607.
Subject
Cognitive Ability
Immersion Programs
Executive Function
Second Language Learning
Auditory Perception
Task Analysis
Bilingualism
Cognitive Development
French
Nonverbal Ability
English (Second Language)
Second Language Instruction
Intelligence
Reaction Time
Elementary School Students
Verbal Ability
Monolingualism
Socioeconomic Status
Attention
Educational Benefits
Interference (Language)
Language
English
ISSN
1366-7289
Abstract
Early bilingualism acquired from home or community is generally considered to positively influence cognitive development. The purpose of the present study was to determine to what extent bilingualism acquired through a second-language immersion education has a similar effect. Participants included a total of 106 French-speaking eight-year-old children drawn from two language groups: 53 children enrolled in English immersion classes since the age of five years (the immersion group) and 53 children enrolled in monolingual French-speaking classes (the monolingual group). The two groups were matched for verbal and nonverbal intelligence and socioeconomic status (SES). They were administered a battery of tasks assessing attentional and executive skills. The immersion group's reaction times were significantly faster than those of the monolingual group on tasks assessing alerting, auditory selective attention, divided attention and mental flexibility, but not interference inhibition. These results show that, after only three years, a second-language immersion school experience also produces some of the cognitive benefits associated with early bilingualism.