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McQuillan, Jeff – Reading in a Foreign Language, 2019
Macalister and Webb (2019) claim that "children's literature" written for native English speakers is too difficult for intermediate English as a Second Language (ESL) students, those who have acquired the first 3,000 to 4,000 most commonly used words in English. The authors analyzed a corpus of short stories written for a classroom…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, English, Native Speakers, English Language Learners
Miller, Elizabeth R. – Critical Inquiry in Language Studies, 2009
This article investigates the construction and maintenance of ideologies regarding the legitimacy of English as the dominant language in the United States in interactions involving adult immigrant learners of English. As both the researcher and these students' English as second language (ESL) instructor, I am a participant in the ESL classroom and…
Descriptors: Language Role, Ideology, Native Speakers, Immigrants
Frenck-Mestre, Cheryl – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2006
Clahsen and Felser (CF) have written a fairly comprehensive review of the current literature on on-line second language (L2) processing, presenting data from eye movement, self-paced reading, and event-related potential (ERP) studies with the aim of evidencing possible differences between native language (L1) and L2 processing. The thrust of the…
Descriptors: Adults, Second Languages, Language Processing, Syntax
Traxler, Matthew J. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2006
In this article, the authors lay out an impressive body of evidence that supports two main claims. First, they favor the continuity hypothesis, according to which children's parsing mechanisms are essentially the same as adults'. Parsing strategies change little over time, and those changes that occur are attributed to differences in lexical…
Descriptors: Children, Language Processing, Short Term Memory, Differences
Sekerina, Irina A.; Brooks, Patricia J. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2006
Clahsen and Felser (CF) offer a novel explanation for the qualitative differences in language processing often observed between adult first language (L1) speakers and second language (L2) learners. They argue that, although L2 learners are successful in drawing on lexical, morphological, and pragmatic sources of information, they underutilize…
Descriptors: Syntax, Language Processing, Native Speakers, Pragmatics
Indefrey, Peter – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2006
In their target article, Clahsen and Felser (CF) review studies that they and others have conducted in recent years to confirm the dual mechanism hypothesis and to extend its application to first and second language (L1 and L2) learners. They interpret the findings as supporting both the dual mechanism hypothesis and the claim that the…
Descriptors: Second Languages, Native Speakers, Second Language Learning, Native Language
Libben, Gary – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2006
This paper does a fine job of advancing discussion concerning a question that is indeed quite underrepresented in the literature, that is, how language learners comprehend and produce language in real time. The paper is firmly rooted in the dual mechanism approach to language processing and takes as its starting point the assumption that normal…
Descriptors: Evidence, Sentences, Cues, Figurative Language
The Shallow Structure Hypothesis of Second Language Sentence Processing: What Is Restricted and Why?
Dowens, Margaret Gillon; Carreiras, Manuel – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2006
Clahsen and Felser (CF) analyze the performance of monolingual children and adult second language (L2) learners in off-line and on-line tasks and compare their performance with that of adult monolinguals. They conclude that child first language (L1) processing is basically the same as adult L1 processing (the contiguity assumption), with…
Descriptors: Sentences, Short Term Memory, Monolingualism, Native Speakers
Clahsen, Harald; Felser, Claudia – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2006
The core idea that we argued for in the target article was that grammatical processing in a second language (L2) is fundamentally different from grammatical processing in one's native (first) language (L1). Our major source of evidence for this claim comes from experimental psycholinguistic studies investigating morphological and syntactic…
Descriptors: Evidence, Language Dominance, Cues, Semantics
Ron, Shuli – English Teachers' Journal (Israel), 1993
A small-scale survey of adult native speakers of British and North American English found that a majority of speakers of the latter prefer the simple past tense in (what the author calls) the category of "past with current relevance." (five references) (CNP)
Descriptors: Adults, English, Foreign Countries, Language Patterns
Roberts, David Harrill – 1979
The second language learning methods of Southern Baptist missionaries in Zambia are described. Instead of studying the new language in a school setting, the student receives a week of orientation and is then placed in the community and expected to practice communicating with the native speakers at every opportunity. The student follows a course…
Descriptors: Adults, Autoinstructional Aids, Bantu Languages, Bemba

Felser, Claudia; Gross, Rebecca; Roberts, Leah; Marinis, Theodore – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2003
Investigates the way adult second language (L2) learners of English resolve relative clause attachment ambiguities. Advanced learners of English who were Greek or German native speakers participated in a set of off-line and on-line tasks. Results indicate L2 learners do not process ambiguous sentences of this type in the same way adult native…
Descriptors: Adults, Advanced Students, Ambiguity, English (Second Language)