Processability Theory and the role of morphology in English as a second language development: a longitudinal study

Author:

Dyson Bronwen1

Affiliation:

1. University of Sydney,

Abstract

This article tests a prediction made by Processability Theory (Pienemann, 1998; 2005) that morphological acquisition is the driving force in English as a second language (ESL) development. It first outlines the model of psycholinguistic processing assumed by Processability Theory and shows how stages fall out from it. It then presents the hypothesis that morphological information propels development before sentence-level processing at stage 5 and describes what this should predict for ESL learners. A study is then presented that tested these predictions on oral data collected from two Mandarin speaking, adolescent, ESL learners over one academic year. The study found the acquisition of structures both predicted and not predicted by Processability Theory. While the results afford some evidence consistent with the claims about stages of development, they also provide counter-evidence to the hypothesis that the acquisition of morphology drives development up to stage 5: one learner acquired the predicted syntax for stages 3 and 4 without the morphology, and both learners acquired syntactic structures before associated morphology. Indeed, the findings suggest that the acquisition of morphology, and syntax, varies with learner orientation. To explain these findings, the article presents a proposal that draws on both Processability Theory and generative approaches to second language acquisition (SLA), and concludes by considering the implications of the study.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Education

Cited by 31 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. An Alternative Method of Assessing d/DHH Secondary-School Students' L2 Language Development;American Annals of the Deaf;2024-01

2. Chapter 11. Testing the validity of Processability Theory through a corpus-based analysis;Processability Approaches to Language Acquisition Research & Teaching;2023-02-02

3. Chapter 7. The bilingual development of plural marking in a Malay-English child;Processability Approaches to Language Acquisition Research & Teaching;2023-02-02

4. SLA as complex, dynamical and predictable: A Processability Theory perspective;Second Language Research;2022-11-04

5. A Developmental Approach to Assessing and Treating Agrammatic Aphasia;American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology;2022-05-10

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