Present but silent? The use of languages other than Norwegian in mainstream ECEC

Authors

  • Anna Sara Hexeberg Romøren Oslo Metropolitan University, Norway
  • Nina Gram Garmann Oslo Metropolitan University, Norway
  • Elena Tkachenko Oslo Metropolitan University, Norway
DOI: https://doi.org/10.23865/nbf.v19.310

Abstract

In this paper we present a survey-based study on multilingual practices in 47 ECEC (early childhood education and care) centres, mainly in eastern Norway. Our main concern was to investigate the languages known by staff and children and to explore the extent to which these languages are in active use in day-to-day activities. Our data showed that both staff and children in the selected ECEC groups spoke several languages in addition to Norwegian. Even so, a considerable proportion of the languages known by staff and children were never or rarely in use, and in many ECECs the use of languages other than Norwegian mainly took place when parents were present or when children played without staff interference. We discuss our findings considering theories of multilingual education, asking how ECEC staff can work in order to allow for languages other than Norwegian to be more explicitly considered part of the ECEC language learning environment.

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Published

2023-01-13

How to Cite

Romøren, A. S. H., Garmann, N. G., & Tkachenko, E. (2023). Present but silent? The use of languages other than Norwegian in mainstream ECEC. Nordisk barnehageforskning, 20(1). https://doi.org/10.23865/nbf.v19.310

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Section

Articles

Keywords:

early childhood education and care, language, linguistic diversity, multilingualism