Multilingual children attain their ability to speak more than one language in diverse ways and due to distinct factors, with some developing their bilingualism faster than their peers (Bialystok, 2002; De Houwer, 2009; Luk Nicoladis Hult, 2019; Lang et al., 2012; Pohl Stokols et al., 2003). The proposal is that an alternate bilingual development framework be formed in which transdisciplinary collaborations between ethnographic longitudinal, descriptive, and experimental cross-sectional approaches are merged, in a bid to understand bilingual development from a more holistic perspective. Data would inform early childhood studies, education policy and support parental efforts to raise bilingual children.
Fatma F. S. Said (Mon,) studied this question.