Bangor Mail

UNI RESEARCH SHOWS BILINGUAL BRAIN BENEFITS

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BILINGUAL children have more efficient thinking skills, new research at Bangor University reveals.

Researcher­s used innovative ways to examine thinking skills in school-aged Greek-English bilingual children in the UK and found superior thinking skills compared to children who only spoke one language.

The study, published in the journal Behavior Research Methods, presents a breakthrou­gh in the field of bilingual thought processes. By introducin­g a radical new method, researcher­s were able to measure children’s thinking skills more accurately and comprehens­ively than ever before.

Findings show that bilingual children are on average 6.5% more efficient in their thinking skills than monolingua­l children.

Athanasia Papastergi­ou, Lecturer in the Linguistic­s department of Bangor University and lead author on the publicatio­n, says: ‘It is very exciting to develop this approach to the study of bilingual children. I hope these positive results will help to allay any possible fears about bringing up children bilinguall­y and highlight the benefits of doing so.’

The research team, in collaborat­ion with Dr Vasileios Pappas from the Kent Business School, University of Kent, achieved its breakthrou­gh by adapting methodolog­y from the field of economics to the study of bilinguali­sm. The project analysed data from children educated through the medium of both Greek and English in UK schools, in comparison with monolingua­l children.

Eirini Sanoudaki, Senior Lecturer in Linguistic­s and senior academic in the project, explains: ‘There is an obvious advantage in being able to communicat­e in more than one language; our findings show that learning two languages can have even more benefits for children’s developmen­t. We asked children, for example, to remember and repeat as many numbers as they can, to ignore irrelevant informatio­n, and to shift quickly between different tasks: bilingual children were better overall than monolingua­l children. These results are important for us here in Wales and indeed for bilingual communitie­s across the world.’

The team will now expand its research to other languages, with a new project examining language and thinking skills in Englishspe­aking children attending Welsh-medium education.

● The study was co-funded by the Economic and Social Research Council Wales Doctoral Training Partnershi­p and the Department of Linguistic­s in the School of Arts, Culture and Language at Bangor University. The publicatio­n is freely available: https://doi.org/10.3758/ s13428-021-01658-7

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