A Corpus-Based Study on Orthographic Errors of Russian Heritage Learners and Their Implications for Linguistic Research and Language Teaching

Author:

Kisselev Olesya1,Dubinina Irina2ORCID,Paquette Galina3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures, College of Arts and Sciences, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208, USA

2. Department of German, Russian, and Asian Languages and Literature, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA 02453, USA

3. Department of Russian, Wellesley College, Wellesley, MA 02481, USA

Abstract

The challenges faced by heritage language (HL) learners in mastering spelling and orthography are well-documented. Despite these documented difficulties, this aspect of HL linguistic knowledge has received limited attention from HL researchers. Beyond instructional implications, the study of spelling and orthography in HL speakers holds significance to building a finer understanding of the nature of heritage languages, since the development of orthographic skills is intricately linked to the knowledge of phonology and morphology as well as to metalinguistic awareness in these two areas. The study presented in this paper attempts to contribute to this area of research by turning its attention to orthographic skills of Russian heritage learners with English as their dominant language. The corpus-based research presented here categorizes orthographic errors in adjectival endings in hand-written essays produced by college-age HL learners of Russian of various writing proficiency levels and attempts to provide preliminary explanations for the source of these errors. While this paper is exploratory in nature and limited in scope by focusing only on adjectival endings, our results emphasize the need for further exploration in this underrepresented area to enhance our understanding of heritage language development and improve instructional strategies.

Funder

Theodore and Jane Norman Award Scholarship for Faculty Research and Creative Projects, Brandeis University

UTSA COEHD Junior Faculty Research Award

Center for Advanced Language Proficiency Education and Research

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference37 articles.

1. ACTFL (2024, March 02). ACTFL Proficiency Guidelines. Available online: https://www.actfl.org/educator-resources/actfl-proficiency-guidelines.

2. A corpus-based study on the misspellings of Spanish heritage learners and their implications for teaching;Beaudrie;Linguistic and Education,2012

3. Bučilova, Irina (2024, March 03). To the problem of studying the writing of immigrant children in elementary school. [К прoблеме изучения oсoбеннoстей письма детей-мигрантoв младшегo шкoльнoгo вoзраста]. Available online: http://7universum.com/ru/philology/archive/item/2563.

4. Hammadou, JoAnn (2002). Literacy and the Second Language Learner, IAP.

5. Bilingual perceptual benefits of experience with a heritage language;Chang;Bilingualism: Language and Cognition,2016

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