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Calling all bilinguals! If you speak English, but consider another language to be your stronger language, please answer the survey questions below--and be entered in a raffle.
This survey is a web-based version of the example booklet that accompanied Pearson's colloquium at the Centre for Research in Bilingualism at the University of Bangor, April 27, 2009. It is part of a larger project at the University of Massachusetts Amherst to explore the different meanings words like all, each, and every have in everyday life, and explore their effect on math performance for children of different language and dialect backgrounds.
We thank you in advance for taking a few minutes to fill out the questions below. Sign up for a prize raffle for the first 100 respondents (at the last question). Win a copy of my book or Tom Roeper's book, or a prize certificate from Cambridge University Press (up to $100). We have a winner!! E. Chipkin of College Park has been sent a copy of my book. To refer others to a slightly updated version of the survey, go to:
http://www.kwiksurveys.com/online-survey.php?surveyID=OIHKG_7f21b1b7
There is no right answer to these questions: just the answer that feels right to you.
Answer quickly. Please answer the questions with your first reaction. (That is, do not deliberate at length about them.) They will seem very simple. They are. There is no trick involved, so, don’t look for a trick. (The math problems are just examples. Don’t solve them. Just, please answer the questions concerning the language they use.)
Assent. We'll start with some background questions and also ask you to say explicitly that you are willing to let us use your answers in research reports. Your name will not be used, but we need your initials to make sure that we have your permission.
For more information about the project, or to see the results of the survey, please contact B. Pearson at bpearson@research.umass.edu
If you have concerns about your participation that cannot be resolved by B. Pearson, please contact one of the board of faculty members in the Linguistics Department that oversees these experiments. They are Lyn Frazier, John Kingston, Joe Pater, and Tom Roeper, and can be reached at 413-545-0885