ling212- sla l1 transfer florencia franceschina. what is this speaker s l1? … it is confirmed by...

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LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina

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Page 1: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

LING212- SLAL1 transfer

Florencia Franceschina

Page 2: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

What is this speaker’s L1?

“… it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence, both on psychology and physic.[…] The earlier a people begin to smoke or the more cigaretters he smoked, the more dangerous he will have on his health.”

Source: S02FLPEDU01WT, HKC

a. Spanishb. Chinesec. German

Page 3: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

What is transfer?

“[transfer is evidenced as] those instances of deviation from the norms of either language which occur in the speech of bilinguals as a result of their familiarity with more than one language”

Weinreich (1953: 1)

Page 4: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

“[transfer is] the use of the native language (or other language) information in the acquisition of an L2 (or additional language)”

Gass (1996: 321)

“[transfer is] influence that the learner’s L1 exerts on the acquisition of an L2”

Ellis (1997: 51)

Page 5: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Other terms

Transfer Mother tongue influence (Corder, 1967) Native language influence (Gass, 1996) Cross-linguistic influence (Kellerman and

Sharwood-Smith, 1986; Odlin, 1989) Cross-linguistic generalization (Zobl, 1984)

Page 6: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Early research

1950s-1960s Behaviourism Lado (1957), Fries (1945) Positive transfer (facilitation)

vs Negative transfer (interference)

Page 7: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Contrastive Analysis

• Methodology (strong version of CAH):

1. Find out what the differences are between pairs of languages2. On the basis of 1, you can predict areas in which L2 learners will have difficulties and those where they won’t

• Pedagogical uses

Page 8: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Lado’s hierarchy of difficulty:

– Differentiation– New category– Absent category– Coalescing– Correspondence

Page 9: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Problems with CAH

CAH was empirically unsupported:

– It predicted some difficulties that were not observed in L2 learners

– It failed to predict some difficulties that were observed in L2 learners

Page 10: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Error Analysis

Corder (1967) Mistake vs Error EA methodology:

– Collect data– Identify errors– Classify errors– Quantify errors– Identify source– Remedy

Page 11: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Classifying errors

Source or errors:

– Interlingual

– Intralingual

Page 12: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Problems with E.A.

Total reliance on errors (not the whole picture)

Difficulties identifying source of errors

Page 13: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Morpheme order studies

Dulay and Burt (1973, 1974)Bailey, Madden and Krashen (1974)

Claim: there is little or no influence of the L1 in L2 development

Page 14: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Problems with no-L1-influence-on-SLA views

There IS empirical evidence of L1 influence

Methodological drawbacks of morphemes studies

Page 15: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Krashen’s account of L1 transfer

No L1 influence in the acquired system

L1 influence is a communication strategy

(Krashen, 1982, 1985)

Page 16: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Kellerman’s (1979) framework

Learner’s perceived language distance Psychotypology Markedness

Page 17: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Current views on transfer

General consensus: both the L1 and general developmental processes shape SLA.

No agreement on exactly what each contributes, or how.

Page 18: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Transfer may be realised as:

Errors Facilitation Avoidance strategies Hypercorrection Overproduction ...

Page 19: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Where can transfer manifest itself?

Rate of acquisition Route of development Frequency of occurrence of errors/omissions Perception and production Seemingly all areas of the grammar

Exercise

Page 20: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Transfer in the L2 initial stage

Minimal Trees (Vainikka and Young-Scholten, 1994, 1996, 1998)

vs

Full Transfer/Full Access (Schwartz and Sprouse, 1994, 1996)

Page 21: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Recent developments

Transfer in L3 acquisition (Cenoz and Jessner, 2000)

L2 effects on the L1 (Cook, 2003)

Page 22: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

References

Bailey, N., C. G. Madden and S. D. Krashen. 1974: Is there a ‘natural sequence’ in adult second language learning? Language Learning 24, 235-243.

Cenoz, J. and U. Jessner. (eds.) 2000: English in Europe: the acquisition of a third language. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters.

Corder, P. 1967: The significance of learner errors. International Review of Applied Linguistics (IRAL) 5, 2/3: 161-170.

Cook, V. J. (ed.) 2003: Effects of the second language on the first. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters. Dulay, H. and M. Burt. 1973: Should we teach children syntax? Language Learning 23, 245-258. Dulay, H. and M. Burt.1974: Natural sequences in child second language acquisition. Language Learning 24,

37-53. Ellis, R. 1997: Second language acquisition. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Fries, C. 1945: Teaching and learning English as a foreign language. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan

Press. Gass, S. M. 1996: Second language acquisition and linguistic theory: the role of language transfer, in W. C.

Ritchie and T. K. Bhatia, eds. The handbook of second language acquisition. San Diego: Academic Press. Pp. 317-345.

Kellerman, E. 1979: Transfer and non-transfer: where we are now. Studies in Second Language Acquisition 2, 37-57.

Kellerman, E. and M. Sharwood Smith. 1986: Crosslinguistic influence in second language acquisition. New York: Oxford University Press.

Page 23: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

References

Krashen, S. D. 1982: Principles and practice in SLA. Oxford: Pergamon Press. Krashen, S. D. 1985: The Input Hypothesis: issues and implications. London: Longman. Lado, R. 1957: Linguistics across cultures. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. Odlin, T. 1989: Language transfer: cross-linguistic influence in language learning. Cambridge: Cambridge University

Press. Schwartz, B. D. and R. A. Sprouse. 1994: Word order and nominative Case in nonnative language acquisition: a

longitudinal study of (L1 Turkish) German interlanguage, in T. Hoekstra and B. D. Schwartz, eds. Language acquisition studies in generative grammar. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Pp. 317-368.

Schwartz, B. D. and R. A. Sprouse. 1996: L2 cognitive states and the 'full transfer/full access' model. Second Language Research 12, 1: 40-72.

Vainikka, A. and M. Young-Scholten. 1994: Direct access to X'-theory: evidence from Korean and Turkish adults learning German., in T. Hoekstra and B. D. Schwartz, eds. Language acquisition studies in generative grammar. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.

Vainikka, A. and M. Young-Scholten. 1996: Gradual development of L2 phrase structure. Second Language Research 12, 1: 7-39.

Vainikka, A. and M. Young-Scholten. 1998: Functional categories and related mechanisms in child second language acquisition, in S. Flynn, G. Martohardjono and W. O'neil, eds. The generative study of second language acquisition. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.

Weinreich, U. 1953: Languages in contact. New York: Linguistic Circle of New York. Zobl, H. 1984: Aspects of reference and the ponominal syntax preference in the speech of young child L2 learners, in

R. W. Andersen, ed. Second languages: a cross-linguistic perspective. Rowley, MA: Newbury House.

Page 24: LING212- SLA L1 transfer Florencia Franceschina. What is this speaker s L1? … it is confirmed by studies that smoking can cause the addictive and dependence,

Reading

Odlin, T. 2003: Cross-linguistic influence. In Handbook of Second Language Acquisition, eds. C. J. Doughty and M. H. Long. Malden, MA: Blackwell. Pp. 436-486.