how critical is the critical period: the acquisition of definiteness in l2 hebrew by children with...

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2 The purpose of this study The current study aims to show that the major factor for success in L2 acquisition by children is age of first exposure, rather than length of residence, difference in learning style, or difference in task. This is seen as evidence for critical period for second language acquisition.

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2

The purpose of this study

The current study aims to show that the major factor for success in L2 acquisition by children is age of first exposure, rather than length of residence, difference in learning style, or difference in task. This is seen as evidence for critical period for second language acquisition.

3

Is there a critical period for L1?

Lennenberg (1967) - A biological basis for the critical period around puberty when left hemisphere lateralization is complete.

Seliger (1979) - Multiple critical periods. Long (1990) - The capacity for language

development is maturationally constrained. The decline reflects loss of neural plasticity

There are several sensitive periods for learning different language functions.

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Is there a critical period for L2?

Johnson & Newport (1989) - Negative correlation between native-like attainment and age of arrival (before 17)

Birdsong (1992) - Some adult L2 learners can become NNS, but they are the exception

DeKeyser (2001) - Children’s success in becoming NNS does not depend on their linguistic aptitude.

Age of exposure is a critical factor for success in acquisition

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Other barriers to second language acquisition (Bialystok, 1997)

Amount and type of exposure (Snow & Hoefnagel-Hohle, 1978)

Length of residence Difference in learning style Different motivation between children and

adults.

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The focus of this study

Most studies focus on proficiency in L2 of adult speakers, past puberty, and the comparison is based on age of first exposure and length of exposure.

The current study focuses on the effects of age of first exposure to L2 on children’s level of attainment of that language, before puberty.

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We tested the use of definiteness

in Hebrew by children whose L1

is Russian and L2 is Hebrew

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Definiteness in Hebrew and Russian

A sharp typological difference between the two languages

Russian does not mark definiteness by a definite article, whereas Hebrew does.

Knowing the system in L1 does not facilitate its learning in L2. Rather, the opposite is true.

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Use of the Definite article by Russian-Hebrew teenagers (Rom 1999)

No ceiling effects among subjects even after three years of exposure

No correlation between length of exposure to L2 (0.5-3 years) and level of success

The definite article is used more in writing then speech

Rate of acquisition varies across tasksRate of acquisition varies across categories

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SubjectsRussian immigrant children aged 10 to 12,

who have been exposed to Hebrew for six or seven years

Both parents speak Russian at home, though all know Hebrew.

Children speak Russian with parents, and Hebrew with siblings and friends

All children study at the same school and are from middle SES

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Testing groups

Three groups of L2 Hebrew children, according to age of arrival (3, 4;6, and 6)

Two groups of L1 Hebrew controls (aged 10 and 12).

10 subjects in each group

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Tasks

We tested both for comprehension and production in writing using two tasks:

Yes/no judgment Sentence completion with pictures

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Yes/No Judgment

11 categories of pragmatic and syntactic environment where the definite article should, or shouldn’t be used (cf. Fruchtman 1982)

Both grammatical and ungrammatical sentences.

Subject were asked to mark sentences as linguistically correct and incorrect

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Sentence completion with pictures

5 categories of pragmatic and syntactic environment where the definite article should, or shouldn’t be used (cf. Fruchtman 1982)

Subjects were presented with a picture and were asked to complete a sentence describing the picture.

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Findings - Judgment Task

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

12, L110, L16/6, L24/6, L23/7, L2

Groups

Co

rrec

t an

swer

s

Number and percentage of correct results: a cross-group comparison

77% 66% 66%

85% 90%

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A cross-group comparison

Children who were exposed to Hebrew from the age of three scored significantly better than those arriving at a later age.

They scored marginally lower than their age matched controls.

Children who were exposed to Hebrew after the age of 4;6 scored significantly lower than their age matched controls.

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10

12

14

16

18

20

22

24

26

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0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

3/7, L2

4/6, L2

6/6, L2

10, L1

12, L1

Group profile: Individual scores within groups

Number of correct responses [N= 26]

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Comparing the 3/7 group with the 6/6 group on the different categories

On nine of the eleven categories, 3/7 scored better than the 6/6 group, on one category they scored the same, and on one worse.

0%10%20%30%40%50%

60%70%80%90%

100%

3/7

6/6

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Comparing the 3/7 group with the 4/6 group on the different categories

On eight of the eleven categories, 3/7 scored better than the 4/6 group, on two category they scored the same, and on one worse.

0%10%

20%30%40%50%

60%70%80%

90%100%

3/7

4/6

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Comparison across the three groups

There was no significant difference between the 4/6 and 6/6 groups.

Only three categories showed negative correlation between success and age for all three groups.

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Comparing the 3/7 group with their aged matched group on the different categories

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

cat1

cat2

cat3

cat4

cat5

cat6

cat7

cat8

cat9

cat1

0ca

t11

3/7

10

On eight of the eleven categories, the 3/7 scored worse than the 10 group, on two categories they scored the same, and on two - better.

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Findings – Sentence Completion

Similar results of a negative correlation between success and age were found on the picture elicitation task, with the 3/7 group scoring significantly better then the other two groups.

81.46% 66.69% 64.78%

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

3/7

4/6

6/6

Percentage of correct results: a cross-group comparison

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Comparison across groups on the different categories

On three of the five categories, 3/7 scored better than both groups, and on one categories they scored the same. All groups scored at ceiling on the fifth category

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

cat1 cat2 cat3 cat4

3/7

4/6

6/6

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Comparison across tasks

No significant differences were found between the two tasks

77%

66% 66%

81%

67% 65%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

3/7 4/6 6/6

Judgment

Elicitation

Percentage of correct results across tasks

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Comparison to Russian-Hebrew teenagers with shorter exposure

No ceiling effects among subjects even after seven years of exposure

Rate of acquisition varies across categories

Correlation between length of exposure to L2 (6-7 years) and level of success

Rate of acquisition did not vary across tasks

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Length vs. age of exposure

Rom (1999) – No correlation between length exposure to L2 (0.5-3 years) and level of success

We found correlation between length of exposure to L2 (6-7 years) and level of success

? Age of exposure, rather than length of exposure,

is the major factor.

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Conclusion

Given the young age of arrival for all three groups and the long period of exposure, the differences are striking.

The major factor for success in L2 acquisition by children is age of first exposure rather than length of residence, difference in learning style, or difference in task.

For children, the critical period is most critical, though it’s effects might fade away with time.

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Thank You

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Categories for use of definite article: Judgment task.

Cat1 - First vs. second reference:I ate an/*the apple. The/*an apple was tasty.

Cat2 - Abstract and Generic nounsWhat did you do for the/*a world

Cat3 - Unique termThe history of the western world is important

Cat4 - Noun-Adjective agreementDan ra’a et ha-mexonit *(ha-)aduma

Dan saw acc the-car the red

‘Dan saw the red car’

Cat5 - Quantifier -NounAll the children entered

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Cat6 - definiteness for possession:koev li ha-rosh.

‘I have a headache’.

Cat7 - Noun + Free Possessorata makir et ha-ben sheli?

‘Do you know my son?’

Cat8 - Noun+bound possessor - Adjective agreementxaveri ha-blondini me’od nexmad

Cat9 - conjunctionThe boys and the girls left

Cat10 - Supperlative formsYerushalayim hi ha-ir ha-yafa beyoter

Cat11 - Definiteness resistant areaskaniti me’at matanot la-yeled

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Categories for use of definite article: Picture elicitation taskGeneric nouns (Cat1)

Where does the light come from? It comes from _________ (the sun)

First vs. second reference (Cat2&3)David picked _______ (a/*the ball). He through _____ (the/*a ball) to Jenny.

Noun + Possessive pronoun (Cat4)David maca ________(et ha-maftexot) sheloDavid found __________ acc the-keys his‘David found his keys’