Learning of Definiteness by Belarusian Students of Swedish as a Foreign Language
Inlärning av bestämdhet hos svenskstuderande i Belarus
Abstract
Through a series of studies, this thesis investigates the learning of definiteness in Russian-speaking students of Swedish. A communicative, oral-production task elicited modified and non-modified noun phrases in indefinite and definite contexts. Study I describes the development of the morphosyntactic structure through which Swedish encodes definiteness, the association between this structure and its meaning, and the relationship between those two tasks over time. Using an English version of the elicitation task and a test of metalinguistic knowledge, Study II examines the relationship between the learners’ explicit knowledge of article semantics and their actual use of English articles. Adding a test of language-learning aptitude, Study III then explores both the influence of second-language English and that of aptitude on the development of Swedish. Finally, Study IV discusses the role of complexity and input frequency. The main findings include that, at the onset of Swedish study, the learners had minimal knowledge of the morphosyntactic structure but were generally sensitive to the meaning of definiteness. However, knowledge of form developed over time while knowledge of meaning did not, and the two learning tasks did not appear to be directly related to each other. In addition, the learners were seldom aware that choosing between indefinite and definite articles require the speaker to take the hearer’s perspective, but this lack of metalinguistic understanding did not seem to affect their use of articles. Further, previous knowledge of English appeared to facilitate the development of a Swedish morpheme that is structurally similar to its English counterpart, while aptitude was associated with the development of a morpheme whose English counterpart is structurally different. Finally, the learners used high-frequency morphemes more consistently than low-frequency ones, and morphemes were more likely to be supplied in frequent constructions than in infrequent ones. These findings are discussed in relation to a modular, cognitive framework for language learning and use.
Parts of work
Agebjörn, Anders (forthcoming). Development of the form and meaning of definiteness in Russian-speaking learners of Swedish. Norsk lingvistisk tidskrift 39(1). Agebjörn, Anders (2020). Explicit and implicit knowledge of article semantics in Belarusian learners of English: implications for teaching. In: Trotzke, Andreas & Tanja Kupisch (eds.), Formal linguistics and language education: new empirical perspectives. (Educational linguistics 43.) Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland AG, pp. 179–201. Agebjörn, Anders & Susan Sayehli. Cross-linguistic influence and language-learning aptitude in L3 acquisition of functional morphology. Unpublished manuscript. Agebjörn, Anders (2021). Swedish noun-phrase structure in Russian-speaking learners: an explorative study of L1 influence and input-frequency effects. Journal of the European Second Language Association 5(1), pp. 16–29.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Humanistiska fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Humanities
Institution
Department of Swedish ; Institutionen för svenska språket
Disputation
Fredagen den 21 maj 2021, kl. 13.15, i Hörsal C350, Humanisten, Göteborg
Date of defence
2021-05-21
anders.agebjorn@gmail.com
Date
2021-04-28Author
Agebjörn, Anders
Keywords
second-language acquisition
third-language acquisition
Russian
English
Swedish
definiteness
noun phrase
implicit and explicit knowledge
cross-linguistic influence
language-learning aptitude
complexity
input frequency
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-87850-80-6
ISSN
1652-3105
Series/Report no.
Göteborgsstudier i nordisk språkvetenskap
42
Language
eng