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1
Gendered Language
Ozier, Owen; Jakiela, Pamela. - : Bonn: Institute of Labor Economics (IZA), 2020
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2
Multilingual assessment of early child development: Analyses from repeated observations of children in Kenya.
In: Developmental Science, vol 22, iss 5 (2019)
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3
Multilingual assessment of early child development: Analyses from repeated observations of children in Kenya
Knauer, Heather A.; Kariger, Patricia; Jakiela, Pamela. - : Springer New York LLC, 2019. : Wiley Periodicals, Inc., 2019
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4
Multilingual assessment of early child development: Analyses from repeated observations of children in Kenya
Knauer, Heather A.; Kariger, Patricia; Jakiela, Pamela. - : John Wiley and Sons Inc., 2019
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5
Multilingual Assessment of Early Child Development : Analyses from Repeated Observations of Children in Kenya
Abstract: In many low- and middle-income countries, young children learn a mother tongue or indigenous language at home before entering the formal education system where they will need to understand and speaka country's official language(s). Thus, assessments of children before school age, conducted in a nation's official language, may not fully reflect a child's development, underscoring the importance of test translation and adaptation. To examine differences in vocabulary development by language of assessment, this study adapted and validated instruments to measure developmental outcomes, including expressive and receptive vocabulary. This study assessed 505 children ages 2 to 6 in rural communities in Western Kenya with comparable vocabulary tests in three languages: Luo (the local language or mother tongue), Swahili, and English (official languages) at two time points, five to six weeks apart, between September 2015 and October 2016. Younger children responded to the expressive vocabulary measure exclusively in Luo much more frequently than did older children: 44?59 percent of those ages 2 to 4, compared to 20?21 percent of those ages 5 to 6. Baseline receptive vocabulary scores in Luo and Swahili were strongly associated with receptive vocabulary in English at follow-up, even after controlling for English vocabulary at baseline: a multivariate regression of follow-up English vocabulary on standardized measures of receptive vocabulary in all three languages yields an estimate, for Luo, of ? = 0.26, SE = 0.05, p
URL: http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/216321569590217665/pdf/Multilingual-Assessment-of-Early-Child-Development-Analyses-from-Repeated-Observations-of-Children-in-Kenya.pdf
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6
Gendered Language
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7
Gendered language
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8
Enhancing Young Children's Language Acquisition through Parent-Child Book-Sharing : A Randomized Trial in Rural Kenya
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