Development of syntactic complexity in Chinese university students' L2 argumentative writing

This study examines how syntactic complexity evolves in argumentative L2 writing by Chinese first-year university students (N = 102). The participants were at either a low-or upper intermediate level of English language proficiency, like the majority of the first-year non-English language major unde...

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Main Authors: Li, Yang, Nikitina, Larisa, Riget, Patricia Nora
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Published: 2022
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/42344/
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spelling my.um.eprints.423442023-10-13T02:33:52Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/42344/ Development of syntactic complexity in Chinese university students' L2 argumentative writing Li, Yang Nikitina, Larisa Riget, Patricia Nora PB Modern European Languages This study examines how syntactic complexity evolves in argumentative L2 writing by Chinese first-year university students (N = 102). The participants were at either a low-or upper intermediate level of English language proficiency, like the majority of the first-year non-English language major undergraduates in China. Notably, there has been little research on L2 writing development among such learners of English. The present study addresses this gap. The participants produced three argumentative essays throughout a semester-long academic L2 academic writing course. Drawing on a multidimensional perspective on syntactic complexity, the analysis employed twelve holistic complexity measures of three types. The data were analyzed with the aid of the Second Language Syntactic Complexity Analyzer (L2SCA) and Stanford Tregex. The findings showed a non-linear trajectory of syntactic complexity development. Notably, there was less of the coordinated clausal complexity and more of nominal complexity in the students' L2 writing. The upper-intermediate group showed greater progress in employing complex nominal types, and there were statistically significant differences in the measures of pre-adjective, post preposition and nominal clauses between the two groups. Pedagogical implications are drawn from these findings. 2022-03 Article PeerReviewed Li, Yang and Nikitina, Larisa and Riget, Patricia Nora (2022) Development of syntactic complexity in Chinese university students' L2 argumentative writing. Journal of English For Academic Purposes, 56. ISSN 1475-1585, DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jeap.2022.101099 <https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jeap.2022.101099>. 10.1016/j.jeap.2022.101099
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic PB Modern European Languages
spellingShingle PB Modern European Languages
Li, Yang
Nikitina, Larisa
Riget, Patricia Nora
Development of syntactic complexity in Chinese university students' L2 argumentative writing
description This study examines how syntactic complexity evolves in argumentative L2 writing by Chinese first-year university students (N = 102). The participants were at either a low-or upper intermediate level of English language proficiency, like the majority of the first-year non-English language major undergraduates in China. Notably, there has been little research on L2 writing development among such learners of English. The present study addresses this gap. The participants produced three argumentative essays throughout a semester-long academic L2 academic writing course. Drawing on a multidimensional perspective on syntactic complexity, the analysis employed twelve holistic complexity measures of three types. The data were analyzed with the aid of the Second Language Syntactic Complexity Analyzer (L2SCA) and Stanford Tregex. The findings showed a non-linear trajectory of syntactic complexity development. Notably, there was less of the coordinated clausal complexity and more of nominal complexity in the students' L2 writing. The upper-intermediate group showed greater progress in employing complex nominal types, and there were statistically significant differences in the measures of pre-adjective, post preposition and nominal clauses between the two groups. Pedagogical implications are drawn from these findings.
format Article
author Li, Yang
Nikitina, Larisa
Riget, Patricia Nora
author_facet Li, Yang
Nikitina, Larisa
Riget, Patricia Nora
author_sort Li, Yang
title Development of syntactic complexity in Chinese university students' L2 argumentative writing
title_short Development of syntactic complexity in Chinese university students' L2 argumentative writing
title_full Development of syntactic complexity in Chinese university students' L2 argumentative writing
title_fullStr Development of syntactic complexity in Chinese university students' L2 argumentative writing
title_full_unstemmed Development of syntactic complexity in Chinese university students' L2 argumentative writing
title_sort development of syntactic complexity in chinese university students' l2 argumentative writing
publishDate 2022
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/42344/
_version_ 1781704630197026816
score 13.18916