Children and adolescents from immigrant families often mediate and translate for their parents and other family members who are not as proficient in the local language, a practice known as Child Language Brokering (CLB). CLB is a multi-faceted activity and may represent a source of power and agency for the children who perform it. This book sets out to explore how CLB is performed by bilingual migrant children and their interactional contribution within the interaction they broker. Real-life interactions were audio-recorded in order to study how child language brokers co-construct meaning and participate in the communication they broker. The findings suggest that relying on authentic naturally occurring data to investigate such a comp...
Abstract Language brokering is a common phenomenon among children of migrants, whereby the child med...
Because the children of immigrants often learn the host language much more quickly than their parent...
This paper will present the results of semi-structured interviews collected from a sample of eight m...
Children and adolescents from immigrant families often mediate and translate for their parents and o...
none1noChildren and young adults belonging to immigrant families often translate for their parents a...
Language Brokering in Immigrant Families: Theories and Contexts brings together an international gro...
Child Language Brokering (CLB) is a very common, yet unseen form of language and cultural (inter)med...
When families migrate to a new country, children often learn the local language very rapidly and, co...
Recent patterns of migration and population change in the UK have led in some places to a need for c...
Language brokering is the action of translating and interpreting that children/adolescents in immigr...
This article reports from instances of child language brokering among emergent bilingual youths and ...
Language brokering is a common phenomenon among children of migrants, whereby the child mediates bet...
Because of the lack of provision of language services and for cultural reasons, immigrants very ofte...
Child Language Brokering (CLB) is a very common, yet unseen form of language and cultural (inter)med...
Language brokering is defined as the practice in which children of first-generation immigrants act a...
Abstract Language brokering is a common phenomenon among children of migrants, whereby the child med...
Because the children of immigrants often learn the host language much more quickly than their parent...
This paper will present the results of semi-structured interviews collected from a sample of eight m...
Children and adolescents from immigrant families often mediate and translate for their parents and o...
none1noChildren and young adults belonging to immigrant families often translate for their parents a...
Language Brokering in Immigrant Families: Theories and Contexts brings together an international gro...
Child Language Brokering (CLB) is a very common, yet unseen form of language and cultural (inter)med...
When families migrate to a new country, children often learn the local language very rapidly and, co...
Recent patterns of migration and population change in the UK have led in some places to a need for c...
Language brokering is the action of translating and interpreting that children/adolescents in immigr...
This article reports from instances of child language brokering among emergent bilingual youths and ...
Language brokering is a common phenomenon among children of migrants, whereby the child mediates bet...
Because of the lack of provision of language services and for cultural reasons, immigrants very ofte...
Child Language Brokering (CLB) is a very common, yet unseen form of language and cultural (inter)med...
Language brokering is defined as the practice in which children of first-generation immigrants act a...
Abstract Language brokering is a common phenomenon among children of migrants, whereby the child med...
Because the children of immigrants often learn the host language much more quickly than their parent...
This paper will present the results of semi-structured interviews collected from a sample of eight m...