Eight Months Later: A Family Case Study of L2 Acquisition of English Morphology
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Zhang, Yanyin
Widyastuti, Ima
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Universitas Sarjanawiyata Tamansiswa
Abstract
This is a follow-up of our 2010 family case study (Zhang & Widyastuti, 2010)
in which we examined the acquisition of L2 English morphology by three
members of an Indonesian family who had been living, working and studying
in Australia for 12 months. In this paper, we will present a fresh set of data
collected after a further 8 months in order to build a longitudinal picture of their
L2 English morphology development. We will focus on the Mother and her 6-
year-old Daughter, whose L2 English morphology, in 2010, was found to be at
the beginning and post-beginning stages as measured by the ‘emergence
criterion’ (Pienemann, 1998). We are interested in the extent of progress they
had made since, and whether the L2 English grammatical morphology had been
fully established by the end of their 20 months of residence in Australia. Our
analysis of their speech data showed that while there was indeed progress, the
progress was not comprehensive and the acquisition was incomplete. We
discuss the finding from the perspective of immersion, home environment, and
affective factors in L2 grammatical development, in particularly, in child L2
learners. The results of the study may inform language professionals and parents
of young child L2 learners of the lengthy period required as well as the type of
optimal L2 environment for their L2 grammatical development.
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Tamansiswa International Journal in Education and Science
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2037-12-31
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