Abstract

Introduction: the paper investigates cross-linguistic influences between the two previously learnt languages and their effects on classroom L3 acquisition. The study checks the predictions of the existing theories of mechanisms of transfer into the L3 attested for naturalistic learners. The main predictions get confirmed with the population of classroom learners of English as the L3. All the participants are native speakers of Russian. They all learnt their dominant foreign language, either French or German, in the classroom. The results suggest a governing role of the Universal Grammar in classroom language learning. Materials and Methods: the experiment uses three production tasks: written production, oral production and pronunciation task. The written assignment asks the participants to translate sentences from Russian into English. The target sentence contains the existential there are that does not exist in Russian. The way the participants structure the target sentence in English allows for conclusion about possible influences of the first foreign language on the development of their L3- English. In the oral production task, the participants are prompted to produce negative sentences. The influences from previously learnt languages is traced through the placement of the negation not. In the pronunciation task Praat was used to measure the duration and the formant frequency of the nasal [N] in English. Differences in sound quality trace back to the influences from the previously learnt languages. The data were analyzed with one-way ANOVA for between and within group differences. Results: in the written task, the participants who studied German as their first foreign language prefer verb final placement in the subordinate, which is ungrammatical in English but grammatical in German. The L2-French group put the verb in the right place, but they do not use the existential there are, which required in English. In the oral task, the placement of negation is Russian-like in both groups. In pronunciation, the quality of English [N] is influenced by the amount of nasality the participants learnt before, i.e. French influences make the English [N] more nasalized than the [N] in the group with German as the first foreign language. Discussion and Conclusion: classroom learners of English as the L3 experience influences from all the previously learnt languages, the native language and the first foreign language. These findings pattern with the assumptions of the main generative theories of naturalistic L3 acquisition. Concluding that classroom language learning is governed by universal grammar, the teaching can benefit from predicting what cross-linguistic influences can be facilitative or not for the acquisition of the target language.

Highlights

  • IntroductionIn the context of foreign language learning, instruction is aimed at re-creating a native-like environment for the target language, foreseeing possible learning problems and walking the students through the process of formation of the non-native grammar (Ilaltdinova & Kisova 2018, Ilaltdinova & Frolova 2018, Archipova et al 2018, Medvedeva et al 2018)

  • It is widely known that instruction plays a crucial role in language acquisition

  • The expected difference in verb placement may show in English sentences like [3] – [5]. [3] The souvenirs are sold in the places where are many tourists

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Summary

Introduction

In the context of foreign language learning, instruction is aimed at re-creating a native-like environment for the target language, foreseeing possible learning problems and walking the students through the process of formation of the non-native grammar (Ilaltdinova & Kisova 2018, Ilaltdinova & Frolova 2018, Archipova et al 2018, Medvedeva et al 2018). This guided or shaped acquisition achieves extremely high results if a learner undergoes intensive training and polishes her classroom obtained skills in real-life communication, for example through Internet chats. There should be similarities between the stages and patterns of cross linguistic influence between naturalistic second/third (L2/L3) language acquisition and classroom foreign language learning

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