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The impact of Siswati L1 on the acquisition of academic english by tertiary students in Swaziland

Research has pointed to the influence of the first language (L1) in the acquisition of the second (L2). In this study I investigate the interface between siSwati as an L1 and the acquisition of Academic English by students of the tertiary institutions of Swaziland. I examine five theoretical framewo...

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Main Author: Dlamini, Phindile Alice
Other Authors: Dowling, Tessa
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: African Languages and Literatures 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Dlamini, Phindile Alice
author2 Dowling, Tessa
author_browse Dlamini, Phindile Alice
Dowling, Tessa
author_facet Dowling, Tessa
Dlamini, Phindile Alice
author_sort Dlamini, Phindile Alice
collection Thesis
description Research has pointed to the influence of the first language (L1) in the acquisition of the second (L2). In this study I investigate the interface between siSwati as an L1 and the acquisition of Academic English by students of the tertiary institutions of Swaziland. I examine five theoretical frameworks which are germane to L2 acquisition – error analysis, interdependency, transfer, interlanguage and fossilization. I discuss how these frameworks can help explain the low levels of proficiency in Academic English among learners in tertiary institution in Swaziland. In my research I employ qualitative research methods – questionnaires with both students and lecturers on initial and subsequent encounters with reading and writing both in the L1 (siSwati) and the L2 (English) – as well as quantitative research methods including statistical analyses of demographic and biographic data. In addition, in order to gauge the impact of the L1 on the L2 I analyse written texts of first and final year students at a number of tertiary institutions in Swaziland. Findings reveal that the students' L1 does, to some extent, interfere with their ability to properly acquire Academic English but cannot entirely explain the students' failure to acquire competency or near native proficiency in Academic English. Other militating factors include early educational environments which were not conducive to stimulating bilingualism, poor supply of text resources in both the L1 and the L2, the lack of a culture of reading in either the L1 or L2, the remoteness of English mother-tongue contexts, peripheral normativity practices in the institutions and indeed the emergence and development of a new variety of English in Swaziland. My own assessment criteria were critiqued during the course of this study and suggestions were made as to the validity of some of my assumptions about what constitutes "correct English". This insight should necessitate a new study on how English competency is assessed in Swaziland and to what it extent it is in line with contemporary views of what constitutes Standard English. It is hoped that the findings of this study will inform current debates on language teaching and assessment in tertiary institutions in Swaziland and also highlight areas of concern for academic programmes that focus on developing language and writing skills. Finally, I recommend that it is literacy in the L1 that needs to be addressed at the grass-roots route level in order for transfer to the L2 to occur successfully. Ultimately I conclude that efficient acquisition of Academic English can only be achieved when cognitive abilities have been properly developed in the L1.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:40:40.553Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
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publisher African Languages and Literatures
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/26203 The impact of Siswati L1 on the acquisition of academic english by tertiary students in Swaziland Dlamini, Phindile Alice Dowling, Tessa African Language and Literature Studies Research has pointed to the influence of the first language (L1) in the acquisition of the second (L2). In this study I investigate the interface between siSwati as an L1 and the acquisition of Academic English by students of the tertiary institutions of Swaziland. I examine five theoretical frameworks which are germane to L2 acquisition – error analysis, interdependency, transfer, interlanguage and fossilization. I discuss how these frameworks can help explain the low levels of proficiency in Academic English among learners in tertiary institution in Swaziland. In my research I employ qualitative research methods – questionnaires with both students and lecturers on initial and subsequent encounters with reading and writing both in the L1 (siSwati) and the L2 (English) – as well as quantitative research methods including statistical analyses of demographic and biographic data. In addition, in order to gauge the impact of the L1 on the L2 I analyse written texts of first and final year students at a number of tertiary institutions in Swaziland. Findings reveal that the students' L1 does, to some extent, interfere with their ability to properly acquire Academic English but cannot entirely explain the students' failure to acquire competency or near native proficiency in Academic English. Other militating factors include early educational environments which were not conducive to stimulating bilingualism, poor supply of text resources in both the L1 and the L2, the lack of a culture of reading in either the L1 or L2, the remoteness of English mother-tongue contexts, peripheral normativity practices in the institutions and indeed the emergence and development of a new variety of English in Swaziland. My own assessment criteria were critiqued during the course of this study and suggestions were made as to the validity of some of my assumptions about what constitutes "correct English". This insight should necessitate a new study on how English competency is assessed in Swaziland and to what it extent it is in line with contemporary views of what constitutes Standard English. It is hoped that the findings of this study will inform current debates on language teaching and assessment in tertiary institutions in Swaziland and also highlight areas of concern for academic programmes that focus on developing language and writing skills. Finally, I recommend that it is literacy in the L1 that needs to be addressed at the grass-roots route level in order for transfer to the L2 to occur successfully. Ultimately I conclude that efficient acquisition of Academic English can only be achieved when cognitive abilities have been properly developed in the L1. 2017-11-14T07:50:08Z 2017-11-14T07:50:08Z 2014 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/26203 eng application/pdf African Languages and Literatures Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle African Language and Literature Studies
Dlamini, Phindile Alice
The impact of Siswati L1 on the acquisition of academic english by tertiary students in Swaziland
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title The impact of Siswati L1 on the acquisition of academic english by tertiary students in Swaziland
title_full The impact of Siswati L1 on the acquisition of academic english by tertiary students in Swaziland
title_fullStr The impact of Siswati L1 on the acquisition of academic english by tertiary students in Swaziland
title_full_unstemmed The impact of Siswati L1 on the acquisition of academic english by tertiary students in Swaziland
title_short The impact of Siswati L1 on the acquisition of academic english by tertiary students in Swaziland
title_sort impact of siswati l1 on the acquisition of academic english by tertiary students in swaziland
topic African Language and Literature Studies
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/26203
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