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Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”, Homage to Clive Perdue December 5-6 2008, University of Paris 8. L1 or L2 acquisition? Development of finiteness in adult L2, in young children (2L1) and in bilingual children (cL2). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,
Page 2: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

• Presentation at the international

conference:

“Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Homage to Clive PerdueDecember 5-6 2008, University of Paris 8

Page 3: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

L1 or L2 acquisition? Development of finiteness

in adult L2, in young children (2L1) and in bilingual children (cL2)

Suzanne Schlyter, Lund University

In collaboration with Jonas Granfeldt, Lund University and Maria

Kihlstedt, Paris X

Page 4: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Structure of the speech

• Introduction

• Part I: adult L2 acquisition

• Part II: first language (L1) acquisition

• Part III: child L2 acquisition

• Part IV: Discussion

• Working Hypothesis: Those children who have acquired INFL+COMP before the L2 acquisition starts, will develop L2 French like adult L2 learners

Page 5: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Why finiteness?

• Central for the syntactic development – the I(NFL) category

Page 6: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Spec

C

Spec

I

Spec

VP

VP’

IP

IP’

CP

CP’

V DP

Illustration - Syntactic structure

- que Pierre a t cassé la voiture

Page 7: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Different positions on acquisition of finiteness and

syntactic structure• A) Structure building:• L1 and L2, initial stages: only lexical

elements (only VP, no INFL) (Perdue, Jordens, Hawkins, Myles …)

• B) Complete syntactic representation in L1 and L2 from initial stages (L1: e.g. Wexler )

• > adL2 learners have access to INFL, COMP etc from start (White 2003); lack of finite marking in L2 is a superficial problem (Missing Surface Inflection) (Lardière, Prevost, …)

• C) Structure building in L1, complete syntax in L2 (Granfeldt 2003, Schlyter 2005)

Possibly syntactic growth = cognitive growth (Schlyter 2008)

Page 8: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Meisel (2006, 2007, 2008) :(2)L1 vs adL2

• Fundamental difference L1-L2, only L1 UG-guided >> Critical Period

• ”The FDH (…) enables us to make specific claims ablut the grammatical domains in which L2 is expected to differ from (2)L1”

• (2)L1: on Subj-Verb Agr never errors (i.e. always je prends, never *je prendre etc)

Page 9: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Marking of finiteness in FRENCH

in children and adults•Subject clitic as ’prefix’ je mets / il marche

•Difference finite – nonfinite forms

je mange / j’ai mangé

il prend / il va prendre

Page 10: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

PART IADULT SECOND LANGUAGE

ACQUISITION adL2

Page 11: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

adL2 – adult second lg acquisition

• Finite verb forms – a well known difficulty (ESF program, Prévost & White 2000, Herschensohn 2001, Schlyter 2004, Schlyter & Bartning 2005 etc)

• (Prévost 2008): finite forms like il boit and non-finite verb forms in finite contexts: *il prendre des vêtements / *nous faire la cuisine

• Proportion nonfinite verbs in finite contexts: ESF data Abdelmalek 24%, Zahra 22%

• Prevost adL2 data: On all verbs: 27-2.5, 32-1.3, 15-0.7, 9-0.0% with growing stage. On lexical verbs only: 39-3.4, 54-2.6, 27-1.5, 15-0.0

Page 12: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Swedish-French adL2

• Schlyter 2004: *je comprendre, la dame comprendre ‘I understand-INF, the lady understand-INF’ *je ne connaître pas ‘I NEG know-INF NEG’

*eh quand on voir français eh … ‘eh when one see-INF French eh’

>> If V+Neg then IP; if CP then IP >> Finiteness in syntactic sense is present – still nonfinite

verbs

Page 13: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Schlyter & Bartning 2005nonfinite verbs forms in adL2

• Initial stages (Stades 1 à 2, <9 months exposition):

• Corpus Lund (Schlyter): • nonfinite forms 34% (of lexical verbs) • (= 64% finite forms)• Corpus InterFra (Bartning)• Nonfinite forms 22% (=78% finite f)• Thomas, A. (forthc) ca 50%

• Advanced stages (from Stage 4 B&S): • practically NO nonfinite forms (cf. Prévost 2008

’High Intermediate’)

Page 14: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

AdL2: Formes finies/non-finies, corpus Lund

Apprenants formes finies, %

Moins de 9 mois d’exposition 66%

Groupe intermédiaire 80%

Plus de trois ans d’exposition dans le pays ; ou après l’école et un semestre d’université

94%

Page 15: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Corpus LUNDGroupe ou appr/enreg

mois d’exposition

présent,formes finies

présent,formes non-finies

% de formes finies

Caroline G 6 (24heures) 7 5 58%

Henry 1-2 NG < 3 26 15 64%

Björn 1 NG 3 23 16 58%

Björn 2 5 24 15 62%

Karl 1 NG 8 53 34 61%

Karl 2 10 48 17 74%

Page 16: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

AdL2: Formes finies/non-finies dans 3 groupes d’InterFra

Apprenants/groupes

présent fo finies

Présentfo non-fi

% de fo finies

InterFra6 débutantsInt 1-4, 1er sem

329 92 78%

InterFra8 lycéensInt 1-2

464 78 86%

InterFra4 appr univInt 1-4

1633 1 100%

Page 17: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Summary adult L2 acq (Sw>Fr)

• Many nonfinite forms in finite contexts

• Simultaneously AUX, MOD and SUBJUNCTIONS (=INFL, COMP), also in very early stages

• Later: development towards correct finiteness

• >> access to INFL from start

Page 18: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

PART II(BILINGUAL) FIRST

LANGUAGE ACQUISITION (2)L1

Page 19: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

(2)L1 – first lg acquisition of finiteness in French

• Initial stage without marking of finiteness

pleure, le bébé ‘ weeps, the baby’

• Soon complete marking without errors, correct syntax, evidence for acq of INFL

(Pierce 1992, Meisel 1994, Schlyter 2004, etc)

j’ai trouvé! ’I (have) found!

n'aime pas celle-là ’like not (=don’t like) that one’

• NEVER nonfinite forms after scl (like *je aimer, *il boire etc.)

Page 20: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

2L1 Swedish – French children

• Children growing up with Swedish and French (Schlyter 1993, 2004, 2005, Granfeldt 2003 etc.)

• Next slide: Occ of subject + nonfinite form (like *il prendre, *je boire )

vs scl+V, in early stages (on ca 2600 utterances)

• Result: NO subj-clitic+Nonfinite form

Page 21: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Child, rec,Age of OnsetSwe-Fr 2L1

ageat rec

MLUFR

nonfinite forms after subject cl /all subjVerb

Jean 1 AO birth 1;10 1,7 0/4-13

Jean 2 2;0 1,1 0/1

Jean 3 2;2 1,7 0/3

Anne 1 AO birth 2;3 1,4 0/2

Anne 2 2;6 1,9 0/17

Anne 3 2;8 2,7 0/23

Anne 4 2;10 2,4 0/24

Mimi 1 2;0 2,1 0/13

Mimi 2 2;2 3,2 0/58

Dany 1 AO birth 2;2 1,2 0/1

Dany 2 2;6 1,8 0/15

Dany 3 2;10 3,1 0/72

Léo 3 AO birth but FR Weak

2;6 2,0 1?/1

Page 22: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Illustration: the verb ”donner” at different ages:

Rec age construction

Jean 1 2;0 donne!

Jean 4 2;4 donné Estelle

Jean 7 2;11 il a donné des chewinggums

Jean 9 3;3 il faut donner beaucoup

Jean 10 3;5 il les donne à maman et papa

Page 23: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Summary 2L1 acquisition (Sw+Fr)

• Initially no evidence for INFL

• Later, evidence for INFL: Scl+finite verbs, aux, mod (PC, FutPr)

• >> Structure building

• No incorrect use of scl+nonfinite forms

Page 24: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

PART IIICHILD SECOND LANGUAGE

ACQUISITION chL2

Page 25: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Why interesting?

• Bilingual daycare, bilingual schools

• The age factor

• If Critical Period, when does it stop? puberty (Lenneberg); 6-7 ys (Rottweiler &

Kroffke, Tracy & Thoma); 3-4 ys (Meisel, Unsworth). Depends on phenomena? on language?

• If gradual decline (Montrul 2008), what declines?

Page 26: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Previous studies on chL2 French

• Meisel (to appear), children AO 3-4 years:

Many have nonfinite forms >> = adL2

• Prévost 2004, children Kenny, Greg:Nonfinite forms like in L1 acq• Prévost 2008, same children: Few nonfinite forms (2.2 – 5.7%) >> =

L1

>> contradictions!

Page 27: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Present study:(Swedish >) French Child L2

• Children: RACHEL, PATRICK, VIOLA, VALENTINA, HANNES, from LFSL Stockholm (see Granfeldt, Schlyter & Kihlstedt 2007)

• L1 Swedish, L2 French• Age of Onset 3;4 to 6;6 years

• Levels defined in Mean Length of Utterance (MLU) and VocD/10:

Page 28: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Development cL2 children - MLU + VocD/10(Arlette 2L1), Rachel, Patrick, Viola, Hannes,

ValentineMLU, VocD cL2

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

mlu F

D F gm 10

Page 29: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Nonfinite forms in cL2 from very

early

Patrick 6;1 years, input 7 m*INV: regarde, qu+est+ce+qu' elle fait avec la

fleur ? ‘look what she does with the flower’*CHI: il [/] il [/] il &pernde [= peint] .

‘he he he paint.INF’

Hannes 7;1 ys, input 7 m *CHI: et le chien qui &oua [?= voit] et [/] ‘and the dog who sees’ *CHI: et # il # prendre # le # chat # dans # euh ça . ‘and he take.INF the cat in that’

Page 30: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Finite forms (of lexical/all verbs with subject) in cL2

Child, rec,Age of Onset

Months input at rec

Ageat rec

MLUclan

VocD/10

%non-fin formsof lex V

%non-finite forms of total

Rach 1 AO 3;5 4 3;9 1,4 - --

Rach 2 9 4;2 2,5 2 16% 6%

Rach 3 10 4;3 3,5 2,1 10% 6%

Patr 1 AO 4;9 10+7 6;4 1,9 (2,3*) 1,7 14% 8%

Patr 2 20+4 7;1 2,6 (3,1*) 2,8 60% 10%

Vio 1 AO 6,4 7 6;11 1,6 (2,0*) 1,8 0 0

Vio 2 10+4 3,7 3,9 33% 5%

Han 1 AO 6;6 7 7;1 3,7 2,4 28% 19%

Han 2 10+4 6,3 3,6 0% 0%

V-tin1 AO 6;7 7 7;2 4,0 2,9 19% 12%

V-tin2 10+4 4,7 4,9 0% 0%*MLU sans ’oui’

Page 31: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Verb forms in chL2, Swe - French

sub +prs

su+nonfin

0+nonfin

sub+axm

tot sub+v

%sub+ fin / Vlex totsub

%errors =nonfin on Vlex

%errors=nonfinon total

rach1 0 0

rach2 21 4 0 44 71 84 25 16% 6

rach3 52 6 0 44 103 90 58 10% 6

0

patr1 19 3 0 12 34 86 22 14% 8

patr2 2 3 6 17 29 40 5 60% 10

patr3 11 1 0 37 54 92 12 8% 9

patr4 20 2 8 34 63 91 22 9% 3

0

vio1 3 0 0 4 14 100 3 0% 0

vio2 2 1 5 17 22 66 3 33% 5

0

han1 34 13 1 17 67 72 47 28% 19

han2 9 0 0 78 94 100 9 0% 0

0

val1 34 8 3 25 69 81 42 19% 12

val2 13 0 2 60 75 100 13 0% 0

Page 32: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Comparison between groupsSwedish > French in earliest stages

• Nonfinite forms in finite contexts (Lexical Verbs)• adL2: around 30% below 8m exp• (2)L1: 0 % continously• chL2: around 23% at 7 m exp but rapidly reach 0%

>> these chL2 more like adL2 than L1

Page 33: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

PART IVDISCUSSION

Page 34: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Previous proposals for chL2

• Meisel: Fundamental Difference Hypothesis, Critical Period for grammar ends ca 3-4 years, then chL2 (French) = AdL2

Page 35: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Previous proposals for adL2 acq

• adL2 learners have acquired INFL, COMP etc through their L1, and have access to them in L2 (Schwartz, White,…)

• Cf Perdue fortc• [les apprenants adultes] maîtrisent la

manière dont la finitude est exprimée dans leur L1 et leur tâche d'apprentissage consiste (principalement) à découvrir de nouveaux moyens linguistiques pour exprimer ce concept.

Page 36: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

Our proposal for cL2 (Granfeldt, Schlyter, Thomas)

• We know that children acquire the entire syntactic structure at about 3 – 4 years, i.e. VP > INFL > COMP

• HYP: Those children who have acquired INFL+COMP before the L2 acquisition starts, will develop L2 French like adult L2 learners – not because of age but because of previous development

• These chL2 learners have access to the corresponding cognitive categories (Schlyter forthc)

• chL2 or adL2 learners resort to default forms in the L2 to express these functional / cognitive categories (Thomas forthc)

Page 37: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

THANK YOU! MERCI!

• Thanks also to• LFSL school• Sylvie and Anne• The children and their parents

• The Magnus Bergwall Foundation

Page 38: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

References

• Bartning, I. & Schlyter, S. (2004) “Itinéraires acquisitionnels et stades de développement en français L2”. French Language Studies. 14(3): 281-299

• Granfeldt, J. (2003) L’Acquisition des Catégories Fonctionnelles. Étude comparative du développement du DP français chez des enfants et des apprenants adultes. Etudes romanes de Lund, 67. Institut d'Etudes romanes de Lund, Université de Lund. Doctoral dissertation.

• Granfeldt, Schlyter & Kihlstedt 2007: ” French in cL2, 2L1 and L1 in pre-school children ” PERLES 24, SOL, Lund

• Lardiere, D. (1998) “Case and Tense in the ‘fossilized’ steady state”. Second Language Research 14: 1-26.

• Meisel, J.M. (1994) “Getting FAT: Finiteness, agreement and tense in early grammars”. In J.M. Meisel (ed.), Bilingual First Language Acquisition (pp. 89-129). Amsterdam: Benjamins.

• Meisel, J.M. (2008) “Child second language acquisition or successive first language acquisition?” In B. Haznedar & E. Gavruseva (eds.) Current Trends in Child Second Language Acquisition: A Generative Perspective. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.

• Meisel, J.M. forthc : ”Age of onset in successive acquisition of bilingualism: effects on grammatical development.”

• Montrul,S. 2008: Incomplete Acquisition in Bilingualism. Re-examining the Age Factor. Benjamins

• Pierce, A.E. (1992) Language Acquisition and Syntactic Theory: A Comparative Analysis of French and English Child Grammars. Dordrecht, Boston and London: Kluwer.

Page 39: Presentation at the international conference: “Language Acquisition – comparative perspectives”,

References, cont.• Prévost, P. (2004b) “The semantic and aspectual properties of child L2

root infinitives”. In P.Prévost & J. Paradis (eds.) The Acquisition of French in Different Contexts (pp. 305-331). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.

• Prévost, P. 2008: ”Knowledge of morphology and syntax in early adult L2 French: Evidence for the Missing Surface Inflection Hypothesis”. In: Liceras, J., Zobl, H. & Goodluck, H. (eds): The role of Formal Features in Second Language Acquisition. Erlbaum

• Schlyter, S. (1993): ”The weaker language in bilingual Swedish-French children”. In: Hyltenstam,K. & Å.Viberg (eds): Progression & Regression in Language. Cambridge Univ. Press

• Schlyter, S. (2003) : "Development of verb morphology and finiteness in children and adults acquiring French." in: Dimroth,C. & Starren, M. (eds): Information structure, linguistic structure, and the dynamics of learner language (Benjamins, Studies in Bilingualism), pp 15-45.

• Schlyter, S. (2005): “Adverbs and functional categories in L1 and L2 acquisition of French”. in J.M. Dewaele (ed.) Focus on French as a Foreign Language: Multidisciplinary Approaches. Multilingual Matters. p. 36-62.

• Schlyter, S. (submitted 2008). ”Input, cognitive-linguistic development, and rate of acquisition.” Comment on Target paper by J.M.Meisel, in: Zeitschrift für Sprachwissenschaft.

• Schlyter, S. & Bartning, I. (2005) ”L’accord sujet-verbe en français L2 parlé ». In J. Granfeldt & S. Schlyter (eds.) Acquisition et production de la morphologie flexionnelle. Actes du « Festival de la morphologie », mars 2005 à Lund. PERLES 20 (Petites Études Romanes de Lund, Extra Seriem)

• Thomas, A. forthc (Doctoral dissertation, Univ. Lund)• White, L. 2003: Second Language Acquisition and Universal Grammar.

Cambrigde U.P