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THE USE OF CODE-SWITCHING IN BILINGUAL CHILDREN WITH AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDER by MONICA YOLANDA PONCE-LAWLER, B.A. THESIS Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at El Paso in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE Program in Speech-Language Pathology
- Monica Yolanda Ponce-Lawler
- 2017
Jan 12, 2023 · A highly influential model of adult code-switching, also applied to children’s code-switching, was proposed by Myers-Scotton and updated in Myers-Scotton 2002. Gardner-Chloros 2009 provides an overview of different approaches to the study of code-switching, arguing for the necessity to integrate findings to understand code-switching.
This is known as code mixing. In fact, code mixing is a normal part of bilingual development, and bilingual children actually have good reasons to code mix (Pearson, 2008). One reason some children code mix is that it happens frequently in their language communities—children are just doing what they hear adults around them do (Comeau, Genesee ...
Background: Code-switching may be seen as a weakness in the eyes of many who do not truly understand bilingualism. Several professionals consider code-switching to be a compensatory strategy, however other professionals perceive code-switching as a functionally motivating behavior (Chung, 2006). Whether is it consciously or subconsciously that a child code-switches, there is limited research ...
- Monica Yolanda Ponce-Lawler
- 2017
Mar 31, 2016 · This study is a conversation analysis (CA) of the code-switching behaviors of a bilingual child on the autism spectrum as he engaged in routine interactions with family members. The findings reveal that code-switching was used by this child strategically and systematically as a unique pragmatic resource.
- Betty Yu
- 2016
Sep 4, 2017 · In some studies, code-switching has been distinguished from code-mixing – code-mixing is defined as a practice of mixing languages in a single sentence while code-switching can occur either within or across sentence boundaries within a single discourse or constituent (e.g., Brice & Anderson, Reference Brice and Anderson 1999; Meisel, Reference Meisel 1989; Muysken, Reference Muysken 2000 ...
Code-switching refers to the practice of alternating between two or more languages in the context of a single conversation. Some researchers distinguish the term code-switching from code-mixing, where the former refers to the juxtaposition of two codes (languages or dialects) in a discourse that are grammatical and constrained by regularities, and the latter is more commonly used to refer to ...