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First published on February 5, 2008, doi:10.1177/1046878107310614
Simulation & Gaming 2008;39:240.
A more recent version of this article appeared on June 1, 2008
Role-play and language socialization among bilingual Korean children in the United States
Seongwon Yun*
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: seongwon.yun{at}okstate.edu.
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Abstract |
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This article examines childrens role-play within the framework of language socialization, as well as the relations between (a) utterances made by young bilingual Korean children within the role-play frame and (b) metacommunicative utterances about the play. It analyzes the language features that children use to set up the context of role-play and explores the relationships of the children who participate in the process of role-play socialization. Data analysis includes thematically and pragmatically related sequences of naturally occurring interactions during lunch time and play time in a Korean Baptist church in the United States and play time at some of the childrens homes. Results indicate that bilingual children socialize themselves and jointly construct their identities through role-play in the communities of practice using specific features of language such as metacommunicative verbs, deictics, and code-switching.

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