Older age of onset in child L2 acquisition can be facilitative: evidence from the acquisition of English passives by Spanish natives.
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/10315Date
2016-02-26Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Rothman, Jason; Long, Drew; Iverson, Michael; Judy, Tiffany; Lingwall, Anne; Chakravarty, TusharAbstract
We report a longitudinal comprehension study of (long) passive constructions in two native-Spanish child groups differing by age of initial exposure to L2 English (young group: 3;0–4;0; older group: 6;0–7;0), where amount of input, L2 exposure environment, and socioeconomic status are controlled. Data from a forced-choice task show that both groups comprehend active sentences, not passives, initially (after 3·6 years of exposure). One year later, both groups improve, but only the older group reaches ceiling on both actives and passives. Two years from initial testing, the younger group catches up. Input alone cannot explain why the younger group takes five years to accomplish what the older group does in four. We claim that some properties take longer to acquire at certain ages because language development is partially constrained by general cognitive and linguistic development (e.g. de Villiers, 2007; Long & Rothman, 2014; Paradis, 2008, 2010, 2011; Tsimpli, 2014).
Description
Accepted manuscript version. Published version available at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0305000915000549
Publisher
Cambridge University PressCitation
Journal of Child Language, Vol 43, Iss 3, pp. 662-686Metadata
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