posted on 2017-05-03, 01:50authored byZhang, Yanyin, Widyastuti, Ima
This study investigates the status of morphology in the L2 English of three members of a family from Indonesia (parents and their 5-year-old daughter) who have lived, studied or worked in Australia for a year. The investigation is contextualized against various learning settings in which the informants have learned English: formal instruction in the foreign language environment, naturalistic learning in the target language setting, and a mixture of formal and naturalistic learning in the target language environment. Following the developmental hierarchy for English morphology (Pienemann, 2005; Bettoni and Di Biase, forthcoming) and analytical procedures in Processability Theory (Pienemann, 1998, 2005), we found the informants were at different stages of L2 English morphology, with the father being the most advanced and the daughter the least. We also found a systematic developmental profile of each informant in line with the developmental hierarchy for English morphology. Both findings are discussed with reference to the developmental sequences and the role of learning settings in SLA.
Copyright 2010 Yanyin Zhang and Ima Widyastuti. No part of this article may be reproduced by any means without the written consent of the publisher.
History
Date originally published
2010
Source
Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, vol. 33, no. 3 (2010), p. 29.1-29.17. ISSN 1833-7139