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. 2018 Jan 9;49(1):121–134. doi: 10.1044/2017_LSHSS-17-0043

Table 1.

Summary of previous work examining PCC-R and accuracy of early-, middle-, and late-developing sounds in the English of bilingual Spanish–English–speaking preschoolers.

Publication N (total subjects, bilingual and monolingual) Chronological age (years;months) Findings
Goldstein, Bunta, Lange, Rodríguez, & Burrows (2010) 50 4;3–7;1 Average English PCC-R scores were approximately 92% for bilingual children with differing amounts of language exposure and use.
Goldstein, Fabiano, & Washington (2005) 15 5;0–5;5 (x = 5;2) No significant difference between monolinguals (96.54%) and bilinguals (94.81%) on PCC in English.
Goldstein & Washington (2001) 12 4;0–4;11 (x = 4;7) English PCC for place of articulation was 94%, with place and manner approaching mastery. No comparison to monolingual English speakers.
Gildersleeve-Neumann et al. (2008) 29 3;1–3;10 (x = 3;6) Monolingual English speakers produced significantly higher consonant accuracy (PCC = 77%–78%) than predominantly English speakers (PCC = 70%–71%), who demonstrated significantly higher consonant accuracy than balanced bilinguals (PCC = 53%–55%).
Bunta, Fabiano-Smith, Goldstein, & Ingram (2009) 8 3;0–3;11 (x = 3;3) Monolingual English speakers demonstrated significantly higher PCC (84.88%) than bilingual children (72.85%).
Fabiano-Smith & Goldstein (2010a) 24 3;0–4;0 Accuracy of English early-developing sounds was 93.3%, accuracy of middle-developing sounds was 86.53%, and accuracy of late-developing sounds reached 74.1%. The English productions of monolingual English-speaking children and bilingual children differed significantly on accuracy of early-developing sounds but did not differ in English on middle- or late-developing sounds.
Fabiano-Smith & Goldstein (2010b) 24 3;0–4;0 Overall PCC in English for monolinguals was 84.1%, and overall PCC for bilinguals reached 72.31% (no significant difference).
Burrows & Goldstein (2010) 24 3;1–5;2 PCC was higher in monolingual English speakers with phonological disorders (70.59%), but not significantly higher than bilingual children with speech sound disorders in English (60.55%).

Note. PCC-R = Percentage Consonants Correct–Revised; PCC = Percentage Consonants Correct.