Article
Publicly Available
Frontmatter
Published/Copyright:
March 7, 2024
Published Online: 2024-03-07
Published in Print: 2024-03-25
©2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Editorial
- Introduction: learning, re-learning, and un-learning language(s) in the multilingual family during COVID-19 lockdown
- Articles
- Language in multilingual families during the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway: a survey of challenges and opportunities
- Stability and change in young children’s linguistic experience during the COVID-19 pandemic: insight from a citizen-science sample in the United States
- Family language policies during a global pandemic: challenges and opportunities for language maintenance in Arabic-English multilingual families in the USA
- Parental involvement in online education during Covid-19 lockdown: a netnographic case study of Chinese language teaching in the UK
- Monolingual disobedience, multilingual guilt?: an autoethnographic exploration of heritage language maintenance during COVID-19 lockdowns
- Epilogue opportunity, fear, and well-being: heritage languages during COVID-19
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Editorial
- Introduction: learning, re-learning, and un-learning language(s) in the multilingual family during COVID-19 lockdown
- Articles
- Language in multilingual families during the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway: a survey of challenges and opportunities
- Stability and change in young children’s linguistic experience during the COVID-19 pandemic: insight from a citizen-science sample in the United States
- Family language policies during a global pandemic: challenges and opportunities for language maintenance in Arabic-English multilingual families in the USA
- Parental involvement in online education during Covid-19 lockdown: a netnographic case study of Chinese language teaching in the UK
- Monolingual disobedience, multilingual guilt?: an autoethnographic exploration of heritage language maintenance during COVID-19 lockdowns
- Epilogue opportunity, fear, and well-being: heritage languages during COVID-19