International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism
Pages 45307
Date of Publication:
March 2024
Bilinguals often outperform monolinguals at apprehending the
perspectives of others—an apparent consequence of their experiences
moving across linguistic and sociocultural contexts. Whether English
learners’ (ELs’) use of such skill in academic writing may be affected by
literacy curriculum is the focus of this study. The study explored
students’ use of social perspective taking (SPT) in writing by examining
their responses to a novel argumentative writing task, the iPad–Take A
Stand assessment (iTAS). The iTAS was designed to assess the efficacy
of the Word Generation curriculum (WG), which provides supports for
discussing and deploying multiple perspectives, during its 2012–2014
randomized controlled trial. iTAS essays produced in that study by 4th–
7th-grade ELs and their non-EL peers were coded along two dimensions
of SPT, acknowledgment and articulation. Analyses revealed a positive
impact of WG irrespective of language status on social perspective
acknowledgment, the less sophisticated dimension; in contrast, a
‘bilingual boost’ of the curriculum was detected in students’ use of
social perspective articulation, the more sophisticated dimension. These
findings suggest ELs may draw on their SPT skills when constructing
written arguments, at least in the presence of WG’s sociocognitive and
linguistic supports.
Citations
Hsin, Lisa B., Emily Phillips Galloway, Catherine E. Snow. 2024. Supporting social strengths amid emerging bilingualism: effects of Word Generation on social perspective taking in English learners’ writing. International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism 27, no. 6: 854–869