LINGUIST List 19.2689
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Thu Sep 04 2008
Diss: Applied Ling/Lang Acq/Socioling: Gudmestad: 'Acquiring a ...'
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1. Aarnes
Gudmestad,
Acquiring a Variable Structure: An interlanguage analysis of second-language mood use in Spanish
Message 1: Acquiring a Variable Structure: An interlanguage analysis of second-language mood use in Spanish
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Date: 04-Sep-2008
From: Aarnes Gudmestad <agudmest vt.edu>
Subject: Acquiring a Variable Structure: An interlanguage analysis of second-language mood use in Spanish
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Institution: Indiana University
Program: Department of Spanish
Dissertation Status: Completed
Degree Date: 2008
Author: Aarnes Gudmestad
Dissertation Title: Acquiring a Variable Structure: An interlanguage analysis of second-language mood use in Spanish
Linguistic Field(s):
Applied Linguistics
Language Acquisition
Sociolinguistics
Subject Language(s): Spanish (spa)
Dissertation Director:
Kimberly L. Geeslin
Dissertation Abstract:
This dissertation represents an interdisciplinary approach to the study of interlanguage. It connects issues in classroom-based second language acquisition to topics in sociolinguistics by exploring the relationship between native-speaker (NS) and second-language (L2) variation. Specifically, the linguistic and extra-linguistic variables influencing L2 learners' development of mood use (the subjunctive and indicative contrast) are described and compared to those characterizing the use of NSs of Spanish. In this investigation, 150 L2 learners with a range of proficiency levels and NSs completed three oral-elicitation tasks in Spanish. The frequency and multivariate statistical analyses, conducted using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences 15.0, identified stages of development at which L2 learners of Spanish begin to employ the subjunctive mood in the same linguistic contexts as NSs. The cross-sectional data demonstrated that, as the subjunctive developed, L2 learners expanded and restructured their form-meaning associations and they produced a range of verb forms in mood-choice contexts. Furthermore, the sentence-level variable of semantic category influenced L2 learners' mood use before the discourse-level features of time reference and hypotheticality and the word-level variable of form regularity. The extra-linguistic variable of task was the only factor that predicted mood use for each participant group. The results also showed that the most advanced L2 learners used the subjunctive in largely the same linguistic contexts as the NSs; only subtle differences between the two groups were observed. This dissertation further supports the idea that the variationist framework (i.e., analyses of frequency and predictors) enables linguists to systematically analyze, identify, and describe first and second-language variation, and it demonstrates that variation must be accounted for in order to truly understand how L2 acquisition progresses and what processes are involved.
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