Exploring the pseudo-longitudinal development of specific morphosyntactic features and syntactic complexity in CLIL young learners
International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching 61(3) : 1197-1223 (2023)
Abstract
CLIL studies on language specific areas such as morphosyntax are
still quite limited, particularly those with young learners. Likewise, the pseudoevolution
of morphosyntactic aspects across age and proficiency deserves
particular attention. This paper will fill these gaps by investigating production
accuracy and syntactic complexity in two different age/proficiency groups of CLIL
primary school learners (grade 4 and 6). In terms of accuracy, L1 Spanish transfer
effects associated with the pro-drop parameter (i.e. subject omission and subjectverb
inversion), and the third person singular -s morpheme omission will be
explored. Syntactic complexity will be operationalised through the production of
simple and complex clauses. The findings obtained align with previous research in
that the accumulated hours of CLIL + EFL exposure by grade 6 seem to positively
affect the development of complexity measures. However, the lack of progress in
the case of the rest of the features examined (i.e. subject omission, inversion of the
subject and the third person singular -s omission) calls for the incorporation of focuson-
form components in CLIL programmes.