Abstract

<p>This study aims to test the extent to which 120 Kuwaiti EFL learners are aware of the structure of relative clauses in English through measuring their ability to produce this structure. It also checks whether the English proficiency level of the participants plays a role in their answers on the test. For this purpose, a sentence combination task was used to measure the participants’ ability to produce correct relative clauses in English. This test was selected in order to examine the types of error made by the participants pertinent to relative clauses in English. The results reveal that Kuwaiti EFL learners may not be fully aware of the formation rules of relative clauses in English (total mean=60.4%). The t-test shows that the English proficiency level affected the participants' answers on the test. Specifically, there were statistically significant differences between the answers of the advanced (76.3%) and intermediate learners (44.4%). The number of errors made by the advanced learners was less than that made by the intermediate learners. Regarding the types of error made by the participants, the most noticeable ones were: deletion of the relative pronoun, wrong relative pronoun, repetitive use of resumptive pronouns, passivisation of the relative clause and problems with the indirect object and genitive relative clauses. The researcher analysed the participants' erroneous answers and provided potential reasons to account for them. Finally, the study concludes with some pedagogical implications and recommendations for further research.</p>

Highlights

  • The acquisition of relative clauses has been the subject of numerous debates in the past three decades, mainly due to their complex syntactic behaviour in comparison with other structures

  • The main aim of this study is to measure the ability of Kuwaiti EFL learners to produce correct relative clauses in English, and to account for the errors if found

  • The main aim of this study was to check whether Kuwaiti EFL learners are aware of the structure of relative clauses in English by measuring their ability to produce such structures

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The acquisition of relative clauses has been the subject of numerous debates in the past three decades, mainly due to their complex syntactic behaviour in comparison with other structures. A number of studies have been conducted to get to the bottom of the main sources of difficulty encountering ESL/EFL learners in the process of acquiring relative clauses in English. These studies have given rise to several questions pertaining to the mechanism by which such syntactically-complex structures are acquired by both children and second/foreign language learners (Brown, 1971; Smith, 1974; Keenan & Hawkins, 1987; Kidd & Bavin, 2002). This study aims to measure Kuwaiti EFL learners’ ability to produce relative clauses in English It delves deep into the main sources of difficulty that may present themselves throughout the process of acquiring such clauses, and attempts to account for them.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call