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The Negative Effects Of Bilingualism On Language Development

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My decision to research this topic was based on my own exposure to multiple languages when growing up. Due to my family's connection to Austria, and my Grandmothers fluency, the German language has been present all throughout my childhood. It was, however, a rather unexpected event that caused me to decide to consider the effects of bilingualism on language development. Upon meeting the family dog of a friend, I reflexively spoke to it in German, I realised this was due to the closest thing to a family dog I knew growing up was my great aunt's dog in Austria and because of that, the language I had developed associated with dogs was in German. This event made me question if growing up bilingual was a good thing, or if during their younger years when language is still developing does being exposed and expected to use multiple languages help or hinder how your linguistic skills develop? This essay will present evidence supporting both sides of the argument which I will use to answer this question. Starting my research discussion with the evidence for growing up bilingual having a negative impact is the idea that speech can become jumbled and hard to separate. Some examples from case studies demonstrate how this happens. The one study shows a child from Kessler who is bilingual in English and Spanish who was recorded as saying "Have agua please", with the intention of saying "can I have water please" (Romaine, 1989, pp. 2). This phenomenon is known as code-switching, as first

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