APPLICATION OF PROCESSABILITY THEORY TO SFI STUDENTS’ L2 WRITING COMPETENCIES
Abstract
Aim: The main purpose of this study is to study the written proficiency of SFI students at
different morphological learning levels, and their ability to conjugate verbs, nouns,
and adjectives using a wordless children book (frog-story).
Theory: This study tries to link SFI levels of written proficiency to the levels of Pienemann
hierarchy of language learning. Processability theory is a universal theory of L2
that is applicable to different languages. This theory has been adopted to cover not
only the process of L2 acquisition but also the development of grammatical forms.
PT demonstrated which L2 forms and which variants of grammatical forms are
processable at every developmental stage.
Method: The study is a linguistic study within language-learning using a combination of
primarily quantitative and qualitative methods. It utilizes a commonly used pictorial
frog-story (Mayer,1969) and an accepted taxonomic model of language acquisition,
the Pienemann model of processability hierarchy. The morphemes written by SFI
students were identified from qualitative data (narratives) and then processed via a
quantitative method (independent sample t-test).
Results: The study shows that Pienemann model can be applied to the writing skills of the
students of C and D levels of SFI.
In this study, the SFI students’ narrative abilities, the numbers of morphemes
written, and students’ competences to conjugate and put in agreement three main
word classes (verb, noun, and adjective) were evaluated. Independent Samples Ttest
was used to confirm that writing competences of advanced-level (D level)
students are higher than writing competences of beginner-level (C level) students.
The analysis of the morphemes produced by the students revealed that beginner level
(C level) students demonstrated the 1st, 2nd and 3rd levels of Pienemann model of
processability hierarchy, while advanced-level students demonstrated higher results
at the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th levels of the model.
Degree
Student Essay
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2020-01-22Author
Tajgardoun, Reyhaneh
Keywords
Swedish as a second language
language acquisition
L2 writing
morphology
processability theory
Series/Report no.
Master
HT19 IPS PDA184
Language
eng