LINGUIST List 19.1481
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Mon May 05 2008
Diss: Lang Acq: Lambert: 'Issues in Family Language Planning and Tr...'
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1. Brigitte
Lambert,
Issues in Family Language Planning and Transmission
Message 1: Issues in Family Language Planning and Transmission
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Date: 05-May-2008
From: Brigitte Lambert <belambert optushome.com.au>
Subject: Issues in Family Language Planning and Transmission
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Institution: University of Melbourne
Program: Department of Linguistics and Applied Linguistics
Dissertation Status: Completed
Degree Date: 2006
Author: Brigitte Elisabeth Lambert
Dissertation Title: Issues in Family Language Planning and Transmission
Linguistic Field(s):
Language Acquisition
Subject Language(s): German, Standard (deu)
Dissertation Director:
Michael Clyne
Dissertation Abstract:
This study is concerned with intergenerational language transmission. It highlights the role of parents as managers of the family's linguistic resources and explores the social influences and subjective sensitivities that lead to their respective transmission decisions. The example language is German, precisely because successive census analyses in Australia have charted a marked decline in the numbers of German speakers in this country, indicating that motivation for the transmission of German has waned. Of particular interest, therefore, are the situations in which it is presently being transmitted. The study is based on recorded interviews detailing the transmission history of twenty families in which German is, was, or could have been the targeted transmission language. In the course of the data analysis, a model was developed, depicting the decision process in relation to the planning and implementation stages of the transmission undertaking. This framework also served to link the social, linguistic and attitudinal factors operating in the parents' life experience to the transmission method and linguistic outcomes for the children. The findings show firstly that the transmission decision is negotiated around the needs, interests and desires of the parents. Secondly, the decisions and the transmission process are prompted and sustained by extrinsic and intrinsic orientations, covering child-focussed, mutually oriented and parent-centred motives. Within these interest areas, the advantages of bilingualism, family connectedness and the maintenance of personal identity are of central importance. Furthermore, the transmission method reflects the parents' expectations relative to their express transmission motives, which determine the quality of input and, in turn, the quality of transmission outcomes. In this regard, the parents' linguistic experiences, educational background and the extent of preparation for the transmission task emerge as prominent factors.
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