Chinese Foreign Language Attrition: Investigating Aspect Marker Usage

The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect that rote memorization has on language attrition. More specifically, the loss of grammatical aspect markers is investigated. This study measures the general language attrition of a memorized narrative and an open-ended narrative between time one...

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Main Author: Paul, Michael A.
Other Authors: Liu, Feng-hsi
Language:EN
Published: The University of Arizona. 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194292
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1942922015-10-23T04:40:55Z Chinese Foreign Language Attrition: Investigating Aspect Marker Usage Paul, Michael A. Liu, Feng-hsi Vance, Timothy Troike, Rudolph Christensen, Matthew Acquisition Attrition Chinese Linguistics The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect that rote memorization has on language attrition. More specifically, the loss of grammatical aspect markers is investigated. This study measures the general language attrition of a memorized narrative and an open-ended narrative between time one (T1) and time two (T2) measurements. Attrition of the memorized narrative at T2 is compared to how well the subject had it memorized it at T1. The attrition of aspect is then investigated in both the memorized narratives and open-ended narratives. Aspect marker attrition in the memorized narratives is also compared to how well the subject originally had the narrative memorized at T1. Aspect attrition is then compared between the memorized and open-ended narratives to see the effect of memorization on aspect attrition. Lastly, a qualitative investigation examines the effect of telicity on correct and incorrect aspect marking. This study reveals that learners of Chinese who spend time in a Chinese-speaking environment and gain a fairly high level of oral proficiency retain much of their oral production abilities over a 12-year period. Additionally, subjects are able to retain and use syntax and lexicon from narratives they had previously memorized as beginning-level learners. However, significant levels of content and length attrition occur for both types of narratives. Aspect marker -LE is used the most frequently, but it also has the highest percentage rate of error. Other aspect markers are used less frequently, and have lower percentage rates of error. Attrition in type, variety, and usage of aspect markers is significant between T1 and T2. There is not a significant relationship between how well the subjects produced the memorized narrative at T1 and either their performance at T2 or the attrition of aspect markers in either narrative. The subjects tend to mark telic verbs for perfective aspect more frequently and correctly than atelic verbs. Pedagogical implications of this study include suggestions for teaching perfective aspect as well as designing curriculum for students who are re-learning Chinese. Finally, the author invites further attrition research focusing on the effect of memorization on fluency variables. 2009 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194292 659753492 10707 EN Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Acquisition
Attrition
Chinese
Linguistics
spellingShingle Acquisition
Attrition
Chinese
Linguistics
Paul, Michael A.
Chinese Foreign Language Attrition: Investigating Aspect Marker Usage
description The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect that rote memorization has on language attrition. More specifically, the loss of grammatical aspect markers is investigated. This study measures the general language attrition of a memorized narrative and an open-ended narrative between time one (T1) and time two (T2) measurements. Attrition of the memorized narrative at T2 is compared to how well the subject had it memorized it at T1. The attrition of aspect is then investigated in both the memorized narratives and open-ended narratives. Aspect marker attrition in the memorized narratives is also compared to how well the subject originally had the narrative memorized at T1. Aspect attrition is then compared between the memorized and open-ended narratives to see the effect of memorization on aspect attrition. Lastly, a qualitative investigation examines the effect of telicity on correct and incorrect aspect marking. This study reveals that learners of Chinese who spend time in a Chinese-speaking environment and gain a fairly high level of oral proficiency retain much of their oral production abilities over a 12-year period. Additionally, subjects are able to retain and use syntax and lexicon from narratives they had previously memorized as beginning-level learners. However, significant levels of content and length attrition occur for both types of narratives. Aspect marker -LE is used the most frequently, but it also has the highest percentage rate of error. Other aspect markers are used less frequently, and have lower percentage rates of error. Attrition in type, variety, and usage of aspect markers is significant between T1 and T2. There is not a significant relationship between how well the subjects produced the memorized narrative at T1 and either their performance at T2 or the attrition of aspect markers in either narrative. The subjects tend to mark telic verbs for perfective aspect more frequently and correctly than atelic verbs. Pedagogical implications of this study include suggestions for teaching perfective aspect as well as designing curriculum for students who are re-learning Chinese. Finally, the author invites further attrition research focusing on the effect of memorization on fluency variables.
author2 Liu, Feng-hsi
author_facet Liu, Feng-hsi
Paul, Michael A.
author Paul, Michael A.
author_sort Paul, Michael A.
title Chinese Foreign Language Attrition: Investigating Aspect Marker Usage
title_short Chinese Foreign Language Attrition: Investigating Aspect Marker Usage
title_full Chinese Foreign Language Attrition: Investigating Aspect Marker Usage
title_fullStr Chinese Foreign Language Attrition: Investigating Aspect Marker Usage
title_full_unstemmed Chinese Foreign Language Attrition: Investigating Aspect Marker Usage
title_sort chinese foreign language attrition: investigating aspect marker usage
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194292
work_keys_str_mv AT paulmichaela chineseforeignlanguageattritioninvestigatingaspectmarkerusage
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