Native intuitions, foreign struggles? knowledge of the subjunctive in volitional constructions among heritage and traditional FL learners of Spanish /
Abstract (Summary)
The Spanish subjunctive has been the focus of much SLA research, largely
because it poses difficulties for learners of Spanish whose L1 is English (e.g., Collentine,
1993; Stokes
&
Krashen, 1990; Terrell et al., 1987). Investigating the same feature in
heritage learners of Spanish can provide more information about their linguistic
development and also has the potential to inform our knowledge of the acquisition of the
subjunctive in traditional FL learners. The present study investigates whether heritage
learners recognize grammatical and ungrammatical modal choice in volitional
constructions. These constructions have been selected because this use of the subjunctive
does not vary by a speaker’s dialect or by belief about the idea being expressed.
Furthermore, given that theories of language attrition posit that the structures that are
acquired earliest are the last to be lost (e.g., De Bot
&
Weltens, 1991) and that Spanish
monolingual children acquire the subjunctive in volitional constructions first (Blake,
1980; 1983), heritage learners who have experienced some language attrition may still
have knowledge of this feature. To investigate the effect that language attrition or
incomplete acquisition may have on this knowledge, I also compared the SHL learners in
the sample who were early bilinguals in English (those born in the United States or who
immigrated before age 6) with those who were late bilingual (those who immigrated
between ages 6 and 13). Students enrolled in Spanish for Heritage Learners (SHL) and
Spanish as a Foreign Language (SFL) courses at three universities in the Northeast
completed grammaticality judgment (GJ) and editing tasks, which contained examples of
correct and incorrect mood choices, as well as distracter items. The GJ task also required
participants to explain their judgments. The results indicate that SHL learners outperform
their SFL peers on recognizing correct mood selection. No significant differences were
found between early and late bilinguals. SHL and SFL learners tended to correct
utterances that they had rejected of judged neutrally but gave different types of reasons
2
for accepting utterances. There were several similarities between early and late bilinguals
in terms of their reasons for their judgments of utterances.
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School:University of Iowa
School Location:USA - Iowa
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:spanish language hispanic americans second acquisition bilingualism united states
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