Acquisition of English tense and agreement morphology by L1 Malay and L1 Chinese speakers

This paper reports on a study that investigates the acquisition of English tense and agreement morphology by Malaysian ESL (English as a Second Language) learners. These learners speak Malay and Chinese. In other words, they are Malaysian L1 Malay and L1 Chinese speakers of L2 English. The Failed Fu...

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Main Author: Wong, Bee Eng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pusat Pengajian Bahasa dan Linguistik, FSSK, UKM 2012
Online Access:http://journalarticle.ukm.my/5556/1/18_3_2_Wong.pdf
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author Wong, Bee Eng
author_facet Wong, Bee Eng
author_sort Wong, Bee Eng
collection UKM
description This paper reports on a study that investigates the acquisition of English tense and agreement morphology by Malaysian ESL (English as a Second Language) learners. These learners speak Malay and Chinese. In other words, they are Malaysian L1 Malay and L1 Chinese speakers of L2 English. The Failed Functional Features Hypothesis (Hawkins and Chan, 1997) serves as the framework for the study. The hypothesis claims that post-childhood second language (L2) learners experience syntactic deficits in the L2 if parameterised features present in the functional categories of the L2 are not specified in the L1. However, selected L1 features that correspond to L2 settings are able to enter L2 syntactic derivations. In terms of form-meaning relationships, it is predicted that a syntactic deficit resulting from an L1 influence will affect the assignment of native-like meanings to surface forms. And depending on the differences in the L1 and L2, learners from different L1 backgrounds will not show similar patterns of development. The study gathered data from the two groups of ESL learners in an attempt to compare the role played by the Chinese and Malay languages in the acquisition of the English property being investigated. A grammaticality judgement task (comprising both grammatical and ungrammatical items) was designed to test the learners’ underlying knowledge of tense and agreement morphology in English. The task comprised 16 correctly inflected items with thematic and copula/auxiliary be verb forms, and 32 incorrectly inflected items. The findings suggest that apparent near native-like acquisition of the L2 property might not be the case when learners seem to have more difficulty with the ungrammatical items than the grammatical items. The findings of this study have pedagogical implications for the ESL (English as a Second Language) classroom.
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spelling ukm.eprints-55562016-12-14T06:38:47Z http://journalarticle.ukm.my/5556/ Acquisition of English tense and agreement morphology by L1 Malay and L1 Chinese speakers Wong, Bee Eng This paper reports on a study that investigates the acquisition of English tense and agreement morphology by Malaysian ESL (English as a Second Language) learners. These learners speak Malay and Chinese. In other words, they are Malaysian L1 Malay and L1 Chinese speakers of L2 English. The Failed Functional Features Hypothesis (Hawkins and Chan, 1997) serves as the framework for the study. The hypothesis claims that post-childhood second language (L2) learners experience syntactic deficits in the L2 if parameterised features present in the functional categories of the L2 are not specified in the L1. However, selected L1 features that correspond to L2 settings are able to enter L2 syntactic derivations. In terms of form-meaning relationships, it is predicted that a syntactic deficit resulting from an L1 influence will affect the assignment of native-like meanings to surface forms. And depending on the differences in the L1 and L2, learners from different L1 backgrounds will not show similar patterns of development. The study gathered data from the two groups of ESL learners in an attempt to compare the role played by the Chinese and Malay languages in the acquisition of the English property being investigated. A grammaticality judgement task (comprising both grammatical and ungrammatical items) was designed to test the learners’ underlying knowledge of tense and agreement morphology in English. The task comprised 16 correctly inflected items with thematic and copula/auxiliary be verb forms, and 32 incorrectly inflected items. The findings suggest that apparent near native-like acquisition of the L2 property might not be the case when learners seem to have more difficulty with the ungrammatical items than the grammatical items. The findings of this study have pedagogical implications for the ESL (English as a Second Language) classroom. Pusat Pengajian Bahasa dan Linguistik, FSSK, UKM 2012 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://journalarticle.ukm.my/5556/1/18_3_2_Wong.pdf Wong, Bee Eng (2012) Acquisition of English tense and agreement morphology by L1 Malay and L1 Chinese speakers. 3L; Language,Linguistics and Literature,The Southeast Asian Journal of English Language Studies., 18 (3). pp. 5-14. ISSN 0128-5157 http://www.ukm.my/ppbl/3L/3LHome.html
spellingShingle Wong, Bee Eng
Acquisition of English tense and agreement morphology by L1 Malay and L1 Chinese speakers
title Acquisition of English tense and agreement morphology by L1 Malay and L1 Chinese speakers
title_full Acquisition of English tense and agreement morphology by L1 Malay and L1 Chinese speakers
title_fullStr Acquisition of English tense and agreement morphology by L1 Malay and L1 Chinese speakers
title_full_unstemmed Acquisition of English tense and agreement morphology by L1 Malay and L1 Chinese speakers
title_short Acquisition of English tense and agreement morphology by L1 Malay and L1 Chinese speakers
title_sort acquisition of english tense and agreement morphology by l1 malay and l1 chinese speakers
url http://journalarticle.ukm.my/5556/1/18_3_2_Wong.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT wongbeeeng acquisitionofenglishtenseandagreementmorphologybyl1malayandl1chinesespeakers