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Supporting Bilingual & Multilingual Learners

Bilingual and multilingual learners bring linguistic knowledge that can support English literacy development. Effective instruction distinguishes between typical L2 development and underlying learning difficulties and adapts teaching to the linguistic demands of English.

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Evidence Based Literacy Support​ 02
Table of Contents
Table of Contents

Key Differences in L1–L2 Transfer

Transfer can be facilitative or interfering depending on differences in phonology, morphology, syntax, and writing conventions. Interpretation requires attention to language exposure, instructional history, and cross-language patterns.

Orthographic Transparency and Why English Is More Challenging

Languages differ in the consistency of sound–letter mappings. English is relatively opaque, with many irregular spellings and strong morphological influences. As a result, English places higher demands on phonological processing, orthographic learning, morphological awareness, vocabulary, and working memory.

Dyslexia in Multilingual Learners

Dyslexia occurs across languages and is not caused by multilingualism. Accurate identification requires careful differentiation between L2 exposure effects and persistent word-level processing difficulties.

How Multilingualism Affects Working Memory, Vocabulary, and Writing

Multilingual learners may experience increased demands in vocabulary depth, sentence structure, and writing fluency under time constraints. These demands are best addressed through explicit instruction and strategy-based supports.

Strengths of Multilingual Learners

Multilingual development is often associated with strengths such as metalinguistic awareness, cognitive flexibility, and strategic problem-solving. Instruction builds on these strengths while addressing English-specific literacy demands.

How Instruction Is Adapted at Phonology Private Tutoring

Instruction is adapted through explicit teaching in phonology, orthography, and morphology; embedded vocabulary and language scaffolds; SRSD for writing; and self-regulation supports that promote independent strategy use.

Why Early, Explicit Instruction Prevents Long-Term Gaps

Early, explicit instruction strengthens foundational skills before academic demands intensify, reducing cumulative gaps and supporting stable, transferable progress across subjects and contexts.

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Every learner deserves instruction that reflects their unique strengths and needs. Connect with us to explore the right next steps for dyslexia and learning support.

Call Us Directly: 778-319-2410