The Developmental Stages of the Acquisition of Arabic By Adult English-speaking Learners: Processability Theory and the Formulaic Language

File(s)
Date
2015-12-01Author
Oulhaj, Abdellatif
Department
Linguistics
Advisor(s)
Hamid Ouali
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The aim of this study is to look at the developmental stages of the acquisition of Arabic as a foreign language by adult English learners. Processability theory (Pienemann, 1998, 2005) is adopted to investigate in detail whether the acquisition development will follow the hierarchy as stated by PT. The study targeted agreement within seven grammatical structures. The structures belong to three procedural levels of the hierarchy (stages three to five). Six adult learners participated in this study. They were tested via different tasks to elicit data either to support the predictions of PT hierarchy, or to disconfirm it. Two participants produced subject – verb agreement (stage 4) at a higher rate than N-aAdj / N-N agreement (stage 3). Before disconfirming the Prediction of PT hierarchy, the two participants took a second test to make sure the language they produced is processed and not retrieved as a formula. Students were introduced to a set of new vocabulary and were asked to tell a story based on three picture stories. By learning unfamiliar vocabulary in isolation, the two participants applied grammatical relations to combine words together. Data in test 2 showed a decrease in the acquisition rate of S – V agreement. Therefore, confirming the predictions of PT.
Subject
Arabic
Formulaic Language
Processability Theory
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/90863Type
dissertation