British English or American English vocabulary? A sociolinguistic study of Swedish upper secondary school pupils’ choice of vocabulary and their attitude towards the two language varieties
Abstract
Institution: Göteborg University/Department of English
Course: C-level paper, interdisciplinary paper
Semester: Spring 2007
Title: British English or American English vocabulary?
A sociolinguistic study of Swedish upper secondary
school pupils’ choice of vocabulary and their attitude
towards the two language varieties.
Writer: Charlotte Spångberg
Purpose: To examine Swedish upper secondary pupils’ use of
American and British lexemes and their attitudes towards
the two language varieties.
Method: A quantitative study of pupils’ use of American and
British lexemes in a questionnaire and a qualitative study
of their attitude and reasons for choosing one of the two
varieties.
Material: 70 pupils’ answers to a questionnaire.
Main results: A majority (70-80%) of the pupils preferred American
English. Boys favored American English slightly more
than girls did. A difference between the two school areas
was that more pupils from the affluent school chose AmE
words than the pupils at the less affluent school. The
pupils were generally more positive towards the variety
they had chosen.
Publisher
Göteborgs universitet. Utbildnings- och forskningsnämnden för lärarutbildning
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2007Author
Spångberg, Charlotte
Publication type
other
Series/Report no.
vt07 1200-03I
Language
eng