A Swedish Perspective on Japanese as a Third Language. The Effects of English as Second Language
Abstract
Higher Japanese language studies in Sweden are exclusively taught through English
textbooks. Previous research within the field of third language (L3) acquisition has studied the
effects of mediating languages on L3, but not on Japanese specifically. This paper intended to
investigate the effects of mediating English as a second language (ESL) on Japanese language
acquisition among Swedish language students. To gather the research data, glossary learning
tests in Swedish and English were created. There were 12 participants in total, 7 participants
in the Swedish group (SG) and 5 in the English group (EG). The results show a mean value of
the test scores at 18,43 for SG and 17,2 for EG. The overall test scoring between the two
groups did not greatly differ but the reported experiences show that more participants in EG
perceived the test as cumbersome and difficult than the most participants in SG. However,
the small sample size and uneven distribution of participants between the two groups make
the results statistically insignificant. The current study is perceived as a pilot study and can
hopefully guide future researchers within the field to investigate the matter further.
Degree
Student essay
View/ Open
Date
2021-03-15Author
Malmborg, Rebecca
Keywords
japanska
Third language acquisition
L3 Japanese
L2 English
L1 Swedish
Series/Report no.
SPL kandidat japanska
SPL 2020-054
Language
eng