Abstract
The paper presents preliminary findings of a project which investigated whether learner background, in terms of instruction mode (i.e., school or intensive first-year course at university) and first language (i.e., character based or non-character based), has an impact on the development of writing skills in Japanese as a second language (JSL). Many students in second-year Japanese at university are post-secondary (i.e., they completed Year 12 Japanese at school). They are in class with students who started Japanese at university (i.e., are post-beginners). The intensity of instruction that the two groups have received is very different. A large number of the students learning Japanese at tertiary institutions in Australia are also native speakers of character-based languages (e.g., Chinese). Although there is a substantial volume of studies comparing the effects of instruction mode on L2 development, little is known of how instruction mode and L1 background together may affect L2 development in adult L2 learning settings. The data for the present study include writing samples collected on two occasions from 34 students from a variety of backgrounds. The samples were analysed in terms of length, grammatical complexity and schematic structures, use of kanji (Chinese characters), and vocabulary. The results were compared in terms of study experience and first language. In general, the performance of post-beginner learners from character-based language backgrounds was higher on kanji use and a few other areas, but their superior performance was derived from the interaction of two background factors (L1 and study background). The results show complexity in how different backgrounds affect L2 writing task performance. The study has strong pedagogical implications for teaching a character-based language to students from diverse study backgrounds.
Highlights
At many tertiary institutions in Australia, students who enrol in second-year Japanese are characterised in terms of two background factors: their study experience and first language (L1)
In the present study we investigated how two background factors may influence the development of writing skills in Japanese as a second language
The present study investigated whether learner background and first language has an impact on the development of writing skills in Japanese as a second language
Summary
At many tertiary institutions in Australia, students who enrol in second-year Japanese are characterised in terms of two background factors: their study experience and first language (L1). Some students commenced their Japanese study at university (hereafter ‘post-beginners’) and others at secondary school (hereafter ‘post-secondary’). Many of those first-year post-secondary students enrol in second-year Japanese and study alongside post-beginners. The present study examines to what extent the effects of the two different backgrounds (i.e., L1 and study experience) affect L2 development of writing skills in Japanese. Additional opportunities to review previously presented material may affect the amount of learning, and the quality. Additional study opportunities enable a learner to use increasingly more sophisticated encoding strategies based on knowledge obtained
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