In:Developing Narrative Comprehension: Multilingual Assessment Instrument for Narratives
Edited by Ute Bohnacker and Natalia Gagarina
[Studies in Bilingualism 61] 2020
► pp. 269–296
Narrative comprehension and its associations with gender and nonverbal cognitive skills in monolingual and bilingual German preschoolers
Published online: 10 December 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/sibil.61.09weh
https://doi.org/10.1075/sibil.61.09weh
Abstract
This paper investigates the development of narrative
comprehension in monolingual and simultaneously bilingual German
preschoolers, in relation to the children’s gender and their nonverbal
cognitive skills. MAIN (Multilingual Assessment Instrument for Narratives)
was used to assess narrative comprehension after telling (Baby Birds) and
retelling (Cat) in 199 monolinguals and 66 simultaneous bilinguals. The
groups did not differ significantly concerning their nonverbal cognitive
skills and German language proficiency. Both the monolingual and the
bilingual children were divided into three age groups (4;6–4;11, 5;0–5;5,
5;6–5;11). The narrative comprehension results pointed to significant age
effects only for the monolinguals, in both elicitation modes. No gender
effects were found for any group. For the nonverbal cognition and narrative
comprehension measures, weak correlations obtained for both monolinguals and
bilinguals. These results strengthen the idea that narrative comprehension
is related to nonverbal cognitive skills of monolingual and bilingual
preschoolers.
Article outline
- 1.Narrative skills
- 1.1Narrative comprehension
- 1.2Research on nonverbal cognitive skills and narrative comprehension
- 1.3Research on gender and narrative comprehension
- 2.The present study
- 3.Methods
- 3.1Participants
- 3.2MAIN
- 3.3CPM
- 4.Results
- 4.1Narrative comprehension
- 4.2Impact of nonverbal cognitive skills on narrative comprehension
- 4.3Impact of gender on narrative comprehension
- 5.Discussion and conclusion
Acknowledgements Notes References
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