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Development of Korean Relative Clauses  in L2 Learners’ Written Essays Development of Korean Relative Clauses  in L2 Learners’ Written Essays

Development of Korean Relative Clauses in L2 Learners’ Written Essays - PowerPoint Presentation

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Development of Korean Relative Clauses in L2 Learners’ Written Essays - PPT Presentation

Development of Korean Relative Clauses in L2 Learners Written Essays 15 th AATK Conference June 26 2010 Washington University in St Louis Sorin Huh University of Hawaii at Manoa Purposes of the Study ID: 763084

learners rcs acquisition korean rcs learners korean acquisition language clauses produced relative chn level amp head jpn obl types

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Development of Korean Relative Clauses in L2 Learners’ Written Essays 15th AATK ConferenceJune 26, 2010Washington University in St. Louis Sorin Huh University of Hawaii at Manoa

Purposes of the Study To examine the development of Korean relative clauses (RCs) by second language (L2) learners of Korean at the descriptive level by analyzing L2 learners’ written essays using CHILDES.To investigate whether typological differences between the target language and learners’ first language (L1) have influence on their acquisition of the Korean RCs

Characteristics of Korean RCs Korean RC is prenominal. No relative pronoun is involved. Instead, relativization is signaled by a set of adnominal verbal suffixes such as – 은 , 는 , and – 을 , which also express the tense of the RC. Movement and pronominalization are not involved.

Characteristics of Korean RCs Head-external RCs Head-internal RCs 존 - 은 [ NP [책-을 빌린] 것]-을 돌려 주었다. John-TOP book-ACC borrow-REL.PAST thing-COMP.ACC return-AUX-PAST-DEC.“John returned the book he borrowed.” (from Jeon & Kim, 2007, p. 256) [NP [ti 아기-를 보-는] 여자i ] baby-ACC see-REL.PRES woman“The woman who looks at a baby.” Head Noun Gap 것 Head Noun

Development of Korean RCs 저 남자 든 것 that man [ lift- REL.PRES COMP ] What the man has lifted Headless RCs Head-Internal RCs Head-External RCsL1 (Cho, 1999; Cho & O’Grady, 2009; Y. Kim, 1987; K. Lee, 1991) and L2 acquisition studies (Jeon & Kim, 2007) have shown that Korean RCs develop in the order of : No Head Noun

Noun Phrase Accessibility Hierarchy A typological generalization originally proposed by Keenan and Comrie (1977) The relativizability of noun phrase is in the order of: SU > DO > IO > OBL > GEN > OComp

NPAH and L2 Acquisition The NPAH was extended to SLA to predict the difficulty order of acquiring RCs. Research on European RC acquisition confirmed the NPAH. In other words, subject (SU) RCs are acquired earlier than direct object (DO) RCs . ( Eckman , Bell, & Nelson, 1988; Gass , 1979; Doughty, 1999; Izumi, 2003, Hawkins, 1989, Hyltenstam, 1984)The NPAH has been regarded as a universal hierarchy which predicts L2 developmental order of RCs.

NPAH and L2 Acquisition Recent findings on the acquisition of East Asian Language (EAL) RCs have challenged the universality of the NPAH. Japanese RC acquisition: Mixed findings ( Kanno, 2000, 2001, 2007; Sakamoto & Kubota, 2000 vs. Hasegawa, 2002; Roberts , 2000; Ozeki & Shirai , 2007) Korean RC acquisition: Favorable findings (Huh, in press; Jeon & Kim, 2007; O’Grady et al, 2000, 2003)

Influence of L1 on L2 RC acquisition Kanno (2007)Word order: SVO vs. SOVFiller-Gap order : Prenominal (gap-filler) vs. Postnominal (filler-gap) Interestingly, CHN learners did not perform better than other learners with SVO postnominal L1. In other words, having prenominal RCs was not advantageous for the CHN learners. In this study, only learners with CHN and JPN L1 backgrounds will be included.Word OrderGap-FillerChinese (CHN)SVOPrenominalJapanese (JPN)SOVPrenominal

Research Questions Do L2 learners of Korean show RC developmental order from headless to head-internal to head-external RCs? Do L2 learners of Korean acquire the Korean RCs in the order consistent with the NPAH? Does word order difference in L1 and L2 influence learners’ acquisition of the Korean RCs?

Methods: Korean Learner Corpus L2 Korean Learner CorpusIn total, 406 essays written by 203 Korean as a second language (KSL) learners from beginning to high-advanced level were included in the analysis. Among them, 153 were JPN learners and 50 were CHN learners. Essays were written on various topics. (e.g., Introducing my family, describing a picture, writing opinions about controversial issues, future plans, etc.)

Methods: Korean Learner Corpus CHILDES (McWhinney, 2000)A database of child language transcripts A system of Codes for the Human Analysis of Transcripts of child speech (CHAT) A collection of Child Language Analysis programs (CLAN) The essays were converted into the CHAT format and analyzed using CLAN. http://childes.psy.cmu.edu/

Methods: Coding and Analysis All sentences containing noun-modifying clauses were extracted. Distinction of an RC (Ozeki & Shirai , 2007a, b) Verbs Adjectives with Complements Adjectives in Past Tense Form 읽는 것 내가 먹은 사과 머리가 긴 여자즐거웠던 여행 RCs

Methods: Coding and Analysis Distinction between RCs and other similar clauses (Lee, 2001; Sohn , 1999) RCs Pseudo Relative Clauses ( Coreferent -Opaque Clauses) Noun Complement Clause(Fact-S Type Clauses)내가 먹은 사과밥이 타는 냄새내가 사과를 먹은 사실 RCsNoRCsFurther tests for RCs distinction (Lee, 2001) 1. Is there a Gap inside the RC? 2. Can the gap be filled with a RP ? 3. Can a Psuedo -cleft sentence be made from the RC?

Methods: Coding and Analysis RC Developmental Stages7 RC developmental stages from headless to head-internal and head-external RCs (according to Jeon and Kim, 2007)RC Gap Type Subject (SU)/Direct object (DO)/Oblique (OBL) Types of Errors Tense/inflection error (TIE) Case marker error (CME) Argument omission (ARG) Resumptive pronoun retention (RPR)

Results: Types of RCs Produced Table 1. No. of RCs produced In total, 812 RCs were produced. All of the RCs identified in this study were head-external RCs. Number of RCs per learner seems to increase as learner’s level becomes higher. Dramatic increment appeared at Level 3 both in the number of RCs per learner and the maximum number of RCs produced.L1 L2L3L4L5L6 Total Total 62 91 263 158 119 119 812 RC/Learner 1.17 2.33 6.41 5.45 4.58 7.93 4.00 (Min-Max) (0-4) (0-7) (1-13) (0-11) (1-13) (3-15) (0-15)

Results: Types of RCs Produced Table 2. Accuracy of the RCs produced In general, learners produced RCs more accurately as their level increased. Error types : Tense/inflection error (69%), case marker error (17%), and argument omission (14%) L1 L2 L3 L4 L5 L6TotalRC6291 263 158 119 119 812 Accurate RCs 47 76 225 142 113 108 711 Accuracy (76%) (84%) (86%) (90%) (95%) (91%) (88%)

Results: RC Gap Types Table 3. Gap positions of the RCs At all levels, SU RCs were produced much more frequently than other types of RCs (SU > DO/OBL) . In total, larger proportion of DO RCs were produced than OBL, however such a pattern was not clearly shown at each level. L1 L2 L3 L4L5L6TotalSU 81% 62% 72% 57% 71% 51% 65% DO 16% 1 4 % 14% 30% 19% 24% 19% OBL 3% 2 4 % 14% 13% 10% 25% 15%

Results: RC Gap Types Table 4. Accuracy of each gap type After finishing level 3, learners seem to be able to produce all three types of RCs quite confidently. It should be noted than there were only 2 OBL RCs produced in Level 1. L1 L2 L3 L4 L5 L6SU80%84% 87% 90% 95% 90% DO 50% 69% 92% 89% 96% 93% OBL 100% 91% 73% 90% 92% 90%

Results: The Effects of L1 Table 5. No. of RCs and accuracy in each L1 group At all levels, JPN learners produced greater number of RCs than CHN learners (JPN > CHN) . In addition, JPN learners produced RCs more accurately than CHN learners. L1 L2 L3 L4 L5L6 Total JPN RC/ L 1.28 2.61 7.11 5.76 4.75 9.40 4.22 Accuracy 78% 83% 88% 93% 99% 93% 90% CHN RC/ L 0.70 1.25 4.92 4.63 4.00 5.00 3.34 Accuracy 57% 90% 77% 78% 79% 84% 78%

Results: The Effects of L1 Table 6. RC gap positions for each L1 group Both groups of learners produced SU RCs in much greater proportion than DO and OBL RCs. L1 L2 L3 L4 L5 L6 JPN SU 82% 63% 75% 56% 71% 51% DO 15% 14% 12% 29% 22% 24% OBL 4% 23% 13% 15% 7% 24% CHN SU 71% 50% 63% 59% 71% 52% DO 29% 20% 19% 32% 8% 20% OBL 0% 30% 19% 8% 21% 28%

Results: Learner’s L1 Effects Table 7. Error types by each L1 group JPN learners made much greater number of tense/inflection errors (TIE) than the other types of errors. TIE was indeed the largest number of errors committed by CHN learners. However, considerable proportion of case marker errors (CME) were also produced. TIEAGO CMERPRTotalJPN48 9 7 0 64 (75%) (14%) (11%) (0%) (100%) CHN 21 5 10 1 36 (58%) (14%) (28%) (3%) (100%)

Discussion: Development of RCs (RQ1) Head-external RCs from the beginning level (L1)No indication of headless or head-internal RC stages unlike previous studiesConsiderably larger number of RCs as learners’ level increased U-shape pattern of RC development Level 3 6.41 RC/L Level 4 5.45 RC/L Level 5 4.58 RC/L Level 67.93 RC/L

Discussion: RC Gap Positions (RQ2) SU RCs were produced more frequently than DO and OBL RCs at all levels, supporting the NPAH.After completing level 3, the learners seem to be able to produce all three types of RCs quite successfully (over 90% accuracy). However, no clear developmental pattern was manifested for DO and OBL RCs.

Discussion: L1 effects (RQ3) Overall JPN learners produced the Korean RCs more frequently and accurately than CHN learners. JPN: 4.22 RCs/L, 90% accuracy CHN: 3.34 RCs/L, 78% accuracy Types of errors made by each group seem to reflect the characteristics of their L1. Japanese: TIE > AGO > CME Chinese: TIE > CME > AGO Lack of adnominal verbal suffixes Lack of case markers (CHN)

Limitations & Conclusions Limitations & SuggestionsThe small size of the learner corpusLack of control over the corpusUnequivalent number of learners in each L1 group Different topics across levels and varied length of the essays Conclusions The KSL learners produced Korean head-external RCs from the beginning unlike children or other KFL learners in the previous studies. The acquisition order of the NPAH was supported in this study; SU RCs were developed earlier than DO/OBL RCs. The effects of learners’ L1 were manifested in this study; JPN learners produced the Korean RCs more frequently and accurately than CHN learners.

ReferencesCho, S. (1999). The acquisition of relative clauses: Experimental studies on Korean. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Hawaii at Manoa. Cho, S., & O’Grady, W. (2009). The accessibility hierarchy in Korean: head-external and head-internal relative clauses, 168-174Doughty, C. (199). Second language instruction does make a difference: Evidence from an empirical study of SL relativization . Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 13 (4), 431–469. Eckman , R., Bell, L., & Nelson, D. (1988). On the generalization of relative clause instruction in the acquisition of English as a second language. Applied Linguistics, 9 (1) 1–20. Gass, S. M. (1979). Language transfer and universal grammatical relations. Language Learning, 29(2), 327–344.Hasegawa, T. (2002). The acquisition of relative clauses by children learning Japanese as a second language. Unpublished manuscript, University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa, Honolulu. Hawkins, R. (1989). Do second language learners acquire restrictive relative clauses on the basis of relational or configurational information? The acquisition of French subject, direct object and genitive restrictive relative clauses by second language learners. Second Language Research, 5(2), 158–188.Hyltenstam, K. (1984). The use of typological markedness conditions as predictors in second language acquisition: The case of pronominal copies in relative clauses. In R. Andersen (Ed.), Second languages: A cross-linguistic perspective (pp. 39–60). Rowley. MA: Newbury House.Huh, S. (in press). Does Noun Phrase Accessibility matter? A study of L2 Korean relative clause production. In S. Cheon, (Eds.). Japanese/Korean Linguistics, 19, Stanford, CA: CSLI Publications. Izumi, S. (2003). Processing difficulty in comprehension and production of relative clauses by learners of English as a second language. Language Learning, 53(2), 285–323. Jeon, K. S. & Kim, H-Y. (2007). Development of relativization in Korean as a foreign language. Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 29, 253-276.Kanno, K. (2000). Sentence processing by JSL learners. Paper presented at the Second Language Research Forum 2000, Madison, WI. Kanno, K. (2001). On-line processing of Japanese by English L2 learners. Acquisition of Japanese as a Second Language, 4, 23–28. Kanno, K. (2007). Factors affecting the processing of Japanese relative clauses by L2 learners. Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 29(2), 197–218.Kim, Y. (1987). The acquisition of relative clauses in English and Korean: Development in spontaneous production. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA. Lee, K. (1991). On the first language acquisition of relative clauses in Korean: The universal structure of COMP. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY. Lee, S. (2001). Pseudo-Relative Clauses in Korean, ICKL Proceedings, 305-321. MacWhinney, B. (2000). The CHILDES Project: Tools for Analyzing Talk. 3rd Edition. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum AssociatesO’Grady, W., Lee, M., & Choo, M. (2003). A subject-object asymmetry in the acquisition of relative clauses in Korean as a second language. Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 25, 433-448.O’Grady, W., Yamashita, Y., Lee, M., Choo, M., & Cho, S. (2000). Computational factors in the acquisition of relative clauses. Proceedings of the International Conference on the Development of the Mind, (pp. 433-448). Tokyo: Keio UniversityOzeki, H., & Shirai, Y. (2007a). Does the noun phrase accessibility hierarchy predict the difficulty order in the acquisition of Japanese relative clauses? Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 29(2), 169­–196. Ozeki, H., & Shirai, Y. (2007b). The consequences of variation in the acquisition of relative clauses: An analysis of longitudinal production data from five Japanese children. In Y. Matsumoto, D. Y. Oshima, O.W. Robinson, & P. Sells (Eds.), Diversity in language: Perspectives and implications, 243-70. Stanford, CA: CSLI Publications. Roberts, M. A. (2000). Implicational markedness and the acquisition of relativization by adult learners of Japanese as a foreign language. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Hawai‘i at Mā noa. Honolulu. Sohn, H. M. (1999). The Korean language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Methods: Korean Learner Corpus Essay Topics Essay 1 Essay 2 L1 Topics after studying Korean at the institution Introduing my family L2 Describing a given picturePublic transportation in my home countryL3Writing a complaining letter Writing opinions about a fixed idea (a pretty girl is not smart) L4 My favoraite animal Writing opinions about the 10th-day-no-driving system L5 Difference between my first language and Korean Writing opinions about eating dog soup L6 Things to improve about living in Korea or Korean people Writing opinions about runaway teenagers

Methods: Korean Learner Corpus No. of Participants L1 L2 L3 L4 L5 L6 Total JPN 43 31 28 21 20 10 153 CHN 10 8 13 8 6 5 50 Total 53 39 41 29 26 15 203

Methods: Korean Learner Corpus No. of Participants, Writings, and Tokens L1 L2 L3 L4 L5 L6 Total JPN 43 31 28 21 20 10 153 CHN 10 8 13 8 6 5 50 Total 53 39 41 29 26 15 203

Methods: Korean Learner Corpus Table 1. No. of Learners, Essays, and L1 L2 L3 L4 L5 L6 Total Learners 53 39 41 29 26 15 203 Essays 106 78 82 58 52 30 406

Korean Relative Clauses [ NP [ t i aki-lul po-nun] yecai ] baby-ACC see-REL.PRES woman“The woman who is looking at a baby.”SU[NP [yeca-ka tj po-nun] akij ] woman-NOM see-REL.PRES baby“The baby whom the woman is looking at”DO[NP [namca-ka tk phyenci-lul ssu-nun] yecak ] man-NOM letter-ACC write-REL.PRES woman“The woman to whom the man is writing a letter” IO [ NP [ namca -ka t k phyenci-lul ssu -nun] phen k ] man- NOM letter- ACC write- REL.PRES pen “The pen with which the man is writing a letter” OBL

Development of Korean RCs A small number of studies have been conducted. L1 Acquisition (Cho, 1999; Y. Kim, 1987; K. Lee, 1991)L2 Acquisition (Huh, 2009; Jeon & Kim, 2007; O’Grady, et al., 2000, 2003) Similar findings were obtained from L1 and L2 studies. SU RCs are more easily acquired than DO. No studies have investigated L2 acquisition of OBL RCs. NPAH

Methods: Korean Learner Corpus Table 1. Number of learners and essays L1 L2 L3 L4 L5 L6 Total Learners JPN 43 31 28 21 20 10 153 CHN 10 8 13 8 6 5 50 Total 53 39 41 29 26 15 203 Essays 106 78 82 58 52 30 406

Results 1: Types of RCs Produced Table 2. Accuracy of the RCs produced In general, learners produced RCs more accurately as their level increased. Error types: TIE (69%), CME (17%), & AGO (14%) L1 L2 L3 L4 L5 L6 TotalRC6291263 158 119 119 812 Accurate RCs 47 76 225 142 113 108 711 Accuracy 76% 84% 86 % 90% 95% 91% 88%

Results 3: Learner’s L1 Effects Table 6. RC accuracy by each L1 group In general, JPN learners produced RCs more accurately than CHN learners. Even at the high-advanced level, CHN learners did not reach the accuracy level of the JPN learners. L1 L2 L3 L4 L5 L6 TotalJPN78% 83% 88% 93% 99% 93% 90% CHN 57% 90% 77% 78% 79% 84% 78%

Discussion: Development of RCs (RQ1) The KSL learners included in this study were able to produce head-external Korean RCs quite successfully from the beginning level (L1).No occurrence of headless or head-internal RCs were identified. The learners produced noticeably greater number of RCs as their level increased (1.17 -> 7.93).