Effects of Total Physical Response on Vocabulary Learning in Urdu-English Deficit Bilingual Children

Authors

  • Riffat Naz Department of English Language and Literature, The University of Lahore, Sargodha Campus, Pakistan
  • Qaisar Jabbar Department of English, Govt. Boys Degree College, Dadyal, Mirpur AJK, Pakistan
  • Muhammad Saram Department of English Language and Literature, The University of Lahore, Sargodha Campus, Pakistan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52223/jess.2023.4340

Keywords:

Total physical response, Deficit bilinguals, Vocabulary, Bi-competence, Experimentation

Abstract

Learning vocabulary items via multiple methods and strategies (one of them is TPR) is a challenging task not only in monolingual but also in bilingual speaker[s] who developed delayed speech (autism); therefore, in the current study, it is examined effects of total physical response (TPR) to enhance the vocabulary learning (VL) in Urdu-English deficit bilingual children (UEDBC). To achieve this goal, this study adopts an experimental research design. The participants have been recruited from Mianwali Region, Pakistan. Fifty-two Urdu-English deficit bilingual children (mean age 5-7) have randomly been included in this study after obtaining consent from their parents. They are divided into two groups: (a) control (n=26) and (b) experimental (n=26). The instructional materials consisted of chunks (words) that have been selected to provide stimuli for the students. The study reports that the results of post-tests predict a significant improvement in vocabulary learning and conceiving even in the deficit bilingual children typically using the total physical response method. It vehemently indicates that bi-competence is triggered via total physical response if and only the input material is unifiedly compatible with the sensory-motor system of bilingual competence.

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Published

2023-12-30

How to Cite

Naz, R., Jabbar, Q., & Saram, M. (2023). Effects of Total Physical Response on Vocabulary Learning in Urdu-English Deficit Bilingual Children. Journal of Education and Social Studies, 4(3), 797–805. https://doi.org/10.52223/jess.2023.4340

Issue

Section

Research Articles