Abstract :
Only a decade ago, a very few researchers considered the study of language
disorders in bilingual population worth pursuing. It was mostly argued that there
were enough challenges in studying bilingualism, and even more challenges in
the study of specific language impairment (SLI). So why complicate things and
combine the two domains?
The large waves of migration in recent years led to a growth in the number
of children being raised in multilingual societies, and elucidated the importance
of studying language disorders in bilingual children. In Israel, for example, these
demographic changes yield an extremely diverse population. According to the
Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) and the Ministry of Education, 20% of school
children who attended Hebrew-speaking secular schools in 2004 came from families
in which at least one parent did not speak Hebrew (CBS, 2006).