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Evaluating tact instruction in two languages for bilingual children with autism spectrum disorder
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Evaluating tact instruction in two languages for bilingual children with autism spectrum disorder

Xuehua Zhao, Mirela Cengher, Tianjiao Li, Mariéle Diniz Cortez and Caio F Miguel
Journal of applied behavior analysis, Vol.59(2), p.e70058
04/2026
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12741/rep:13972
PMID: 41803002

Abstract

Autism Spectrum Disorder - psychology Autism Spectrum Disorder - rehabilitation Child Child, Preschool Female Humans Male Multilingualism Teaching
Bilingual individuals can acquire two languages simultaneously or sequentially. Study 1 examined the effects of simultaneous instruction (introducing tacts in both languages at the same time) and sequential instruction (introducing tacts in English, followed by a second language after mastery) with four children with autism. Both instructional procedures were effective, but simultaneous instruction promoted better conditional discriminations between the two languages than sequential instruction. Study 2 compared monolingual with bilingual (sequential) instruction with three participants. Teaching tacts in a single language was substantially more efficient than teaching tacts in two languages for all participants. As in Study 1, participants required additional simultaneous teaching after mastering sequentially taught targets to establish conditional discriminations, whereas monolingual instruction required no additional teaching. These results indicate that monolingual instruction is more efficient than sequential bilingual instruction, although sequential bilingual teaching can still be effective. The findings have important implications for designing bilingual instruction.

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