Book contents
- Learner Corpus Research Meets Second Language Acquisition
- The Cambridge Applied Linguistics Series
- Learner Corpus Research Meets Second Language Acquisition
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Series Editors’ Preface
- Learner Corpus Research and Second Language Acquisition: an attempt at bridging the gap
- Article Use in Russian and Spanish Learner Writing at CEFR B1 and B2 Levels: Effects of Proficiency, Native Language, and Specificity
- L1 Influence vs. Universal Mechanisms: An SLA-Driven Corpus Study on Temporal Expression
- The Interplay between Universal Processes and Cross-Linguistic Influence in the Light of Learner Corpus Data: Examining Shared Features of Non-native Englishes
- Exploring Multi-Word Combinations as Measures of Linguistic Accuracy in Second Language Writing
- Using Syntactic Co-occurrences to Trace Phraseological Complexity Development in Learner Writing: Verb + Object Structures in LONGDALE
- Understanding the Long-Term Evolution of L2 Lexical Diversity: The Contribution of a Longitudinal Learner Corpus
- L2 Developmental Measures from a Dynamic Perspective
- Exploring Individual Variation in Learner Corpus Research: Methodological Suggestions
- Building an Oral and Written Learner Corpus of a School Programme: Methodological Issues
- Commentary: Have Learner Corpus Research and Second Language Acquisition Finally Met?
- Commentary: An SLA Perspective on Learner Corpus Research
- Index
- References
L2 Developmental Measures from a Dynamic Perspective
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 December 2020
- Learner Corpus Research Meets Second Language Acquisition
- The Cambridge Applied Linguistics Series
- Learner Corpus Research Meets Second Language Acquisition
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Series Editors’ Preface
- Learner Corpus Research and Second Language Acquisition: an attempt at bridging the gap
- Article Use in Russian and Spanish Learner Writing at CEFR B1 and B2 Levels: Effects of Proficiency, Native Language, and Specificity
- L1 Influence vs. Universal Mechanisms: An SLA-Driven Corpus Study on Temporal Expression
- The Interplay between Universal Processes and Cross-Linguistic Influence in the Light of Learner Corpus Data: Examining Shared Features of Non-native Englishes
- Exploring Multi-Word Combinations as Measures of Linguistic Accuracy in Second Language Writing
- Using Syntactic Co-occurrences to Trace Phraseological Complexity Development in Learner Writing: Verb + Object Structures in LONGDALE
- Understanding the Long-Term Evolution of L2 Lexical Diversity: The Contribution of a Longitudinal Learner Corpus
- L2 Developmental Measures from a Dynamic Perspective
- Exploring Individual Variation in Learner Corpus Research: Methodological Suggestions
- Building an Oral and Written Learner Corpus of a School Programme: Methodological Issues
- Commentary: Have Learner Corpus Research and Second Language Acquisition Finally Met?
- Commentary: An SLA Perspective on Learner Corpus Research
- Index
- References
Summary
An important objective of research in Second Language Acquisition has been to find a simple and reliable way to quantify second language use. Corpora have provided a crucial source of information for these studies. In spite of many attempts to determine an optimal “yardstick” to measure the quality of second language use, particularly lexical complexity and syntactic complexity, a reliable and widely applicable instrument has not yet been determined. The difficulty in finding a suitable instrument can be accounted for in a complex dynamic systems theory (CDST) approach to second language development. An important starting point of this approach is that every next step in time “is the emergent product of context and history, and no component has causal priority” (Thelen 2005, p. 271). In this paper we illustrate this by using a dense longitudinal corpus of the development of 22 highly similar L2 learners, consisting of 23 weekly measurements. The analysis of these data show convincingly that L2 development is a highly individually owned and nonlinear process. While complexity yardsticks (like MLTU and Guiraud) may seem functional from a group perspective, their application to individual learners is very limited.
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- Learner Corpus Research Meets Second Language Acquisition , pp. 172 - 190Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021