Título
Multilingual disciplinary literacies: exploring developmental patterns of science writing across secondary educationGrupo de investigación
Hezkuntza berrikuntzaInnovación educativa
Hizkuntzak eta kulturak gizartean eta eskolan
Lenguas y culturas en la sociedad y en la escuela
Versión
Postprint
Derechos
© The AuthorsAcceso
Acceso abiertoVersión del editor
https://doi.org/10.1080/01434632.2025.2481200Publicado en
Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development Primera página
1Última página
19Editor
Taylor & Francis GroupPalabras clave
Cognitive discourse functions
Disciplinary literacy
Writing development
Multilingualism ... [+]
Disciplinary literacy
Writing development
Multilingualism ... [+]
Cognitive discourse functions
Disciplinary literacy
Writing development
Multilingualism
Language acquisition [-]
Disciplinary literacy
Writing development
Multilingualism
Language acquisition [-]
Materia (Tesauro UNESCO)
Idioma de enseñanzaClasificación UNESCO
EducaciónResumen
This study examines multilingual disciplinary literacies from a developmental perspective, a still relatively underexplored matter. Using a cross-sectional design, 535 multilingual learners enrolled i ... [+]
This study examines multilingual disciplinary literacies from a developmental perspective, a still relatively underexplored matter. Using a cross-sectional design, 535 multilingual learners enrolled in Basque immersion programmes across the four years of secondary education (12–16 year old students) completed a disciplinary source-based writing task in the three languages of the curriculum: Basque, Spanish and English. They were asked to produce two cognitive discourse functions: argue and compare. Texts were coded with an analytic rubric consisting of 11 items, and linear mixed models were used to assess the effect of Year, Testing Language and L1. Findings showed that all items improved in all three languages as students progressed through secondary education, with non-linear and gradual patterns in certain moments. While diverse patterns across languages were found, parallel developmental patterns took place, particularly between Basque and Spanish. Some measures showed varying developmental patterns for L1 groups. In conclusion, results support multilingual writing development and language transfer theories, and provide evidence for the development of multilingual disciplinary literacies. This study presents important theoretical and practical implications for multilingual education and disciplinary literacies. [-]
Financiador
Basque GovernmentSpanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities
Número
IT1664-22PRE_2021_1_0001
PID2019-111655RA-I00
Colecciones
- Artículos - Educación [111]
El ítem tiene asociados los siguientes ficheros de licencia: