L2 Learners’ Acquisition of the Preposition to : Prototypical and Polysemous Features

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Title ( eng )
L2 Learners’ Acquisition of the Preposition to : Prototypical and Polysemous Features
Creator
Source Title
広島大学大学院総合科学研究科紀要. I, 人間科学研究
Bulletin of the Graduate School of Integrated Arts and Sciences, Hiroshima University. I, Studies in human sciences
Volume 11
Start Page 13
End Page 28
Abstract
This study examined the effects of instruction on the development of the English preposition to in a quasi-experimental setting with intermediate-level Japanese learners of English. Grammar tests were utilized to measure prepositional accuracies to understand the general effects of the treatment sessions that focused on developing knowledge of the preposition to. These tests were also used to verify if the prototypical feature of to (i.e., indicating an endpoint) and polysemous functions (i.e., spatial, temporal, and abstract) were correlated with changes in accuracies before and after the treatment sessions. Results of this investigation revealed that at the initial stage of this experiment there was little evidence that the notion of the prototypical meaning of to in the targeted items was understood, nor were these learners cognizant of the polysemy of the preposition to across spatial, temporal, or abstract contexts. Allowing for lexical substitution for the preposition to with before or until in the grammar tests, more temporal items could be correctly answered indicating a distinction between cognitive factors that may influence processing of the context, and the shared semantic properties of to, before, and until. After the treatment sessions, all targeted items reached very high accuracies in the post-tests for spatial and temporal scenes showing that learning effects could be maintained beyond the period of treatment. Abstract usages, on the other hand, had a lower level of achievement with a higher rate of attrition after the treatment. The general pedagogical implications of these findings suggest that the prototypical features of prepositions should be taught taking into account polysemy and various other factors such as semantic choice, cognitive features, developmental stages and systematicity, as they may affect explicit learning, retention, and implicit usage of prepositions.
Keywords
prepositions
prototype theory
polysemy
SLA
NDC
Education [ 370 ]
Language
eng
Resource Type departmental bulletin paper
Publisher
広島大学大学院総合科学研究科
Date of Issued 2016-12-31
Rights
Copyright (c) 2016 Graduate School of Integrated Arts and Sciences, Hiroshima University, All rights reserved.
Publish Type Version of Record
Access Rights open access
Source Identifier
[ISSN] 1881-7688
[NCID] AA12198647