Title: Shuing Shyu
1Shu-ing Shyu
- Ch 10 Linguistic Universal and SLA
Ellis, R. (1994). Second Language Acquisition.
2Introduction
- Two approaches toward the study of the language
- Externalized (E) approach
- Internalized (I) approach
- Linguistic universals
- Typological universals (Greenberg 1966 Hawkins
1983 Comrie 1984 Croft 1990) - Universal Grammar (Chomsky)
3- Interlanguage Theory Another perspective
- Adjemian (1976) interlanguages are natural
language, subject to all the same constraints ?
rule governed - the grammatical nature of a learners IL rather
than strategies (1976 306) - Interlanguage Structural Conformity Hypothesis
(Eckman 1991 24) - The universal generalization that hold for the
primary languages also hold for interlanguages. - 11 adult Asians learning English
- ? final stop stop gt fricative stop (1991 24)
4Typological universals and SLA-1
- Absolute universals (implicational universals)
- E.g. If a lg has a noun before a demonstrative,
then it has a N before a RC (Hawkins 1983 84). - If a lg is SOV, then if the adjective precedes
the N, then the genitive precedes the N. - ? in one direction only
- Universal tendencies (non-implicational
universals) - Exceptions? How many can be tolerated?
5Typological universals and SLA-2
- Implicational Universals
- NP Accessibility Hierarchy (NPAH)
- Subj lt DO lt IO lt oblique lt genitive lt object of
comparative (Comrie Keenan (1979)) - See table 10.1 (Jones 1991)
- The grammatical function of the relative clauses
in the matrix clause has various degree of
difficulity. - 2. Markedness as relative phenomenon.
Implicational universals presuppose a markedness
relationship. - If a lg has property X also has property Y ?
- Y is unmarked in relation to X.
6Typological universals and SLA-3
- Evidence to determine the level of markedness of
specific linguistic features - Structure
- Behavior grammatical versatility (gender
pronoun, active vs. passive) - Frequency
7Typologically motivated studies of SLA-1
- Qs
- What influence do typological universals have on
the order of acquisition of grammatical features? - What effect does markedness have on learning
difficulity? - How does the typological status of grammatical
features in the native and target lgs affect L1
transfer?
8Typologically motivated studies of SLA-2
- Negative Placement
- Preverbal negation lt postverbal negation (Dahl
(1979)) - Wode (1984) preverbal negation appears in
interlg, but not present in either L1 or L2. - ? absolute universal?
- Preposition stranding and pied piping
- Pied-piping lt prep stranding (implicational
universal) - (Mazurkewich 1984 Bardovi-Harlig 1987)
- Bardovi-Harlig (1987) markedness hypothesis is
not tenable.
9Typologically motivated studies of SLA-3
- Relativization
- Does the Accessibility Hierarchy (AH) account for
avoidance behavior? - Schachter (1974) left-branching lg speakers
avoid using RCs in English - Gass (1980 138) avoid relativizing on low
positions in the AH - He saw the woman who was kissed by the man. (OS)
- lt He saw the woman that the man kissed. (OO)
- Akagawa (1990) no support for AH in L1 Japanese
speaking English as L2 ? mixed evidence - Does the AH explain the order of acquisition of
relativizable NP positions? - Supporters Gass (1980), Pavesi (1986), Eckman,
Bell Nelson (1988).
10Typologically motivated studies of SLA-4
- Relativization
- Does the AH explain the use of pronominal copies?
- Support Gass (1979 1980), Hyltenstam (1984)
markedness interacts with L1 transfer whether or
not pronominal copies occurred in the learners
L1 - Against Tarallo Myhill (1983)
- Does the AH explain the acquisition of the forms
of different relativizers. - Hawkins (1989) predicted by the AH
- Qui (S) lt que (O)lt dont (Genetive)
- Conclusion
- Markedness correlates with acquisition order
- But Tarallo Myhill (1983), Hawkins (1989)
Learners construct rules for RC on the basis of
the adjacency of categories in the surface
configuration.
11Typologically motivated studies of SLA-5
- Limitations
- Descriptive observations, rather than
explanations - Levels other than syntax (e.g. discourse) are
neglected.
12Universal Grammar and SLA-1
- To address 3 Qs
- 1. What does UG consist of?
- 2. What role does UG play in L1 acquisition?
- 3. What should the domain of a theory of SLA be?
13The Theory of UG-1
- Principles underlines the grammatical rules of
all lgs - Configurationality, Subjacency, Case theory, etc.
- Parameters variations among lgs
- two or more settings
- Word order, pro-drop, etc.
- Pro-drop properties
14The Theory of UG-2
- Markedness UG provides a basis for determining
markedness - core and periphery features
- White (1989a) markedness as internal to the L,
vs. sth external, evident only in extant lgs
(markedness in lg typology). - Zobl (1983) projection capacity
- Markedness is understood in relation to the
amount of primary linguistic evidence needed to
acquire a given property - Evidence of one feature in a cluster may enable
learners to acquire the other features associated
with it, irrespective of whether they have
experienced these features in the input.
15UG and L1 Acquisition-1
- What is the nature of the childs experience of
the target lg? - The poverty of the stimulus
- What does the LAD (Lg Acquisition Device) consist
of?
16The poverty of the stimulus
17The language faculty-1
- --UG ensures that relatively little evidence is
needed for the child to determine that a given
principle is operative in the TL or to decide
which setting of a parameter is the right one - --UG prevents children from construction wild
grammars (Goodluck 1986) - --errors can be unlearned on the basis of
positive evidence - ? a lg is learnable because the child needs to
entertain only a small subset of the hypotheses
that are consistent w/ the input data.
18The methodology of UG-based studies-1
- (1) how to ensure that the subjects have the
requisite level of L2 proficiency to demonstrate
whether or not a particular principle is
operating in their interlanguage grammar. - (2) the need to rule out the effects of the L1
- direct access to UG
- indirect access through their L1
- E.g. L1 (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) -Subjacency
L2Subjacency - ? in accordance w/ UG constraints provided by not
through formal instruction
19The methodology of UG-based studies-2
- (3) parameter setting to establish which setting
out of those possible is reflected in the
learners interlanguage - bi-directional studies w/ control groups
- L1 non-pro-drop-L2 pro-dropL1
- (English)-L2 (Spanish
- pro-drop-L2 non-pro-dropL1) L1
- (Spanish)-L2 (English)
- (4) Data collection
- elicited data have been preferred
- act-out tasks, picture identification task,
sentence-joining, card-sorting tasks, - grammaticality judgment task-making metalingual
assessment.
20The methodology of UG-based studies-3
- UG-based SLA research
- experimental in nature control and experiment
groups, elicited data - have precise hypotheses about the nature of SLA
- explanatory in nature (not the description of
learner lg) -
- Problems
- Grammaticality judgment
- Implicit or explicit knowledge?
- Whether UG is alive or dead in the L2 learner
- ? no clear evidence to support the hypotheses
that learners acquire unmarked core features
before marked peripheral features (e.g. dative
alternation)
21some empirical research-1
- Subjacency
- Studies for the availability of UG
- Richie (1978b)
- rightward movement of PP
- That a man has just passed by was not noticed
in a car. - Japanese graduate students can judge it less
grammatical ? linguistic universals are intact in
the adult (1978b43) - Bley-Vroman, Felix, and Ioup (1988)
- 92 advanced Korean Ls of L2 English
- grammaticality judgment
- --response bias reject Ss irrespective of
grammatical of ungrammatical Ss - a reluctance to make use of not sure
- similar response pattern to NSs
- ? UG is accessible to adult learners
- White, Travis, and Maclachlan
- Malagasy Learners of English
- (subject extraction in wh- interroatives ok in
Malagasy) - judgment test, a written elicited production task
- nearly all high-intermediate Ls, 1/2
low-intermediate Ls reject Subjacency vio. - that Ls who accepted Ss violate Subjacency is
because they had not reached a stage of syntactic
development for the principle to become active
(not acquired yet)
22some empirical research-2
- Subjacency
- Studies against the availability of UG
- Schachter (1989)
- L1 Korean (no Subjacency), Chinese (weak
subjacency), Indonesian (has subjacency, but not
in wh-movement) - English NS as controls judgment test
- different from NSs judgment
- NSs passed both the syntax and the subjacency
tests. - NNSs only passed the syntax tests.
- Bley-Vroman et al.(19888)
- ease of processing rather than UG
- Schachter Yip (1990)
- processing effects
23some empirical research-3
- Subjacency
- Studies against the availability of UG
- Schachter (1989)
- Bley-Vroman et al.(19888)
- Schachter Yip (1990)
- processing effects
- ? relative acceptability rather than absolute
obedience to UG - more types of data elicited, not just
grammaticality judgment tasks
24some empirical research-4
- The pro-drop parameter
- parameter resetting
- White (1985 1986)
- parameter resetting
- ? L2 Ls opt for the L1 setting of the pro-drop P,
as their proficiency increases they switch to the
L2 setting - White (1985) --pro-drop features cluster in IL
grammars? - L1 Spanish, French (1985,6)L1 Italian (1986)L2
English - Ss judgment task (missing expletives and pronouns
subjects), some w/ ungrammatical S-V inversion,
and a that-trace effect - Ellis critics more reliable and valid data
needed, not just judgment data - Spanish and Italian Ls inclined to accept
subjectless Ss, different from the French. - Spanish Ls likely to accept that-trace than the
French - NO difference in judgments of Ss w/ ungrammatical
S-V inversion - ? L2 Ls dont interact directly w/ L2 data, but
initially transfer L1 setting - given time, reset L2 value
- TL features may cluster in IL G
25some empirical research-5
- The pro-drop parameter
- parameter resetting
- Hilles (1986)
- Longitudinal data from Cancino et al. (1978)
- L1 Spanish (only one 12-yr old Colombian)
- L2 acquisition of English negatives and aux
- Hypothesis 1 Jorge L1 (pro-drop) switch to L2
(null pro-drop) - Hypothesis 2 the switch co-occurs w/ the
emergence of aux, triggered by the acquisition of
expletive subject ? Support her two hypotheses - Hilles (1991)
- Longitudinal data from Cancino et al. (1978) L1
6 Spanish (2 children, 2 adolescents, 2 adults) - Q to what extent the use of pronominal Ss and V
inflection were correlated overtime? - 3 of the Ls (2 children, 1 adolescent) manifested
a strong correlation b/w the emergence of
pronominal Ss and V inflection - ? their acquisition guided by UG (mirror L1
acquisition) - other 3 Ls no such correlation ? lack access to
UG
26some empirical research-6
- The pro-drop parameter
- parameter resetting
- Lakshmanan (1991)
- Longitudinal data of 3 children (Marta in Cancino
ea al.s study, Muriel a French child in Gerbault
1978, Uguisu Japanese by Hakuta 1974) - ? support neither a transfer nor a
developmental explanation - ? no unequivocal evidence in favor of the
clustering effect Hilles reported - Phinney (1987)
- Bidirectional study English-speaking Ls of L2
Spanish, Spanish-speaking Ls of L2 English - written composition
- ? L1 value transfer
- ? no evidence of transfer
27some empirical research-Summary
- ? no real support for a parameter-setting model
of SLA., no clear evidence of any clustering
effects (Lakshmanans and Phinneys) - Learning principles (clearer results)
- L2 learners do not follow the Subset Principle
28- Summary
- White L2 Ls do not have access to learning
principles like the Subset principle. They build
a superset L2 G, often influenced by L1. They
restructure this G, creating a subset G by
negative E. - Testable hypotheses
- (1) L1 Ls will not make certain kinds of error
whereas L2 Ls will ? Subset Principle operative
in L1A - (2) L2 Ls with no access to negative evidence
will fail to eliminate superset errors (not
investigated) - (3) L2 Ls who receive formal instruction will
eliminate errors. (received support Ch. 14)
29The logical problem of SLA
- (i) SLA is essentially the same as for L1A
- (ii) SLA is different because L2 learners achieve
variable success - (iii) L2 competence is qualitatively different
from L1 competence. - ? different views regarding the role of UG in SLA
30Access to UG in SLA (Table 10.3)
- The complete (direct) access view
Parameter-setting Model (Flynn 1984 1987) - (2) No-access view Clahsen and Muysken (1986
Meisel 1991) (the Fundamental Difference
Hypothesis) - (3) Partial-access (indirect) view Schachter
(1988) (i.e. via L1) - (4) Dual access position Felix (1985)
Competition Model
31The role of negative evidence
- L1 Ls negative evidence not available
- L2 Ls have access to both corrective feedback
explicit grammatical information - Negative evidence is beneficial to L2 learning
- White (1991) Adv placement can be successfully
learnt through formal instruction - ? negative evidence triggers the resetting of a
parameter to its L2 value - Schwartz (1986) negative evidence can result in
the A of grammatical knowledge - Ellis if UG exists to enable children to acquire
grammatical competence solely on the basis of
positive E, it is hardly felicitous to propose
that L2 Ls can access parts of it with the help
of negative evidence. (p. 457)
32