The learning of the past progressive tense: an investigation into target language interference and crosslinguistic interference

Based on the notion that the teaching and learning of the tense should take into consideration not merely its verb forms and semantic functions, this paper studies the learners’ perception of the tense in relation to other tenses and verb forms in a total of ten different situations. Using multiple...

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Main Author: Miin, Jason Hwa Lim
Format: Article
Published: Penerbit Universiti Malaysia Sabah 2002
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Online Access:https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/18692/
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spelling my.ums.eprints.186922018-02-09T07:15:11Z https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/18692/ The learning of the past progressive tense: an investigation into target language interference and crosslinguistic interference Miin, Jason Hwa Lim P Philology. Linguistics Based on the notion that the teaching and learning of the tense should take into consideration not merely its verb forms and semantic functions, this paper studies the learners’ perception of the tense in relation to other tenses and verb forms in a total of ten different situations. Using multiple-choice items that competed with one another at the morphological, phonetic and semantic levels, the researcher offered an objective approach to studying the significance of the learners’ first language in the second language acquisition of the past progressive tense. An analysis of both errors and non-errors has revealed that the role of the mother tongue is prominent, yet its significance should not be exaggerated. This is due to the plausibility that verb forms in the target language may also be a cause of learning difficulty or interference that has often been overlooked by researchers. On the basis of the data elicited, it is recommended that when a new tense is taught, the tense should always be contrasted with other tenses in terms of their verb forms and functions in a wide range of situations. Some useful techniques have also been recommended to help learners distinguish the past progressive tense from other tenses in an effort to minimise interference resulting from both the mother tongue and the target language itself. Penerbit Universiti Malaysia Sabah 2002 Article PeerReviewed Miin, Jason Hwa Lim (2002) The learning of the past progressive tense: an investigation into target language interference and crosslinguistic interference. MANU: Jurnal Pusat Penataran Ilmu dan Bahasa (PPIB), 7 (7). pp. 63-83. ISSN 1511-1989
institution Universiti Malaysia Sabah
building UMS Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Sabah
content_source UMS Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.ums.edu.my/
topic P Philology. Linguistics
spellingShingle P Philology. Linguistics
Miin, Jason Hwa Lim
The learning of the past progressive tense: an investigation into target language interference and crosslinguistic interference
description Based on the notion that the teaching and learning of the tense should take into consideration not merely its verb forms and semantic functions, this paper studies the learners’ perception of the tense in relation to other tenses and verb forms in a total of ten different situations. Using multiple-choice items that competed with one another at the morphological, phonetic and semantic levels, the researcher offered an objective approach to studying the significance of the learners’ first language in the second language acquisition of the past progressive tense. An analysis of both errors and non-errors has revealed that the role of the mother tongue is prominent, yet its significance should not be exaggerated. This is due to the plausibility that verb forms in the target language may also be a cause of learning difficulty or interference that has often been overlooked by researchers. On the basis of the data elicited, it is recommended that when a new tense is taught, the tense should always be contrasted with other tenses in terms of their verb forms and functions in a wide range of situations. Some useful techniques have also been recommended to help learners distinguish the past progressive tense from other tenses in an effort to minimise interference resulting from both the mother tongue and the target language itself.
format Article
author Miin, Jason Hwa Lim
author_facet Miin, Jason Hwa Lim
author_sort Miin, Jason Hwa Lim
title The learning of the past progressive tense: an investigation into target language interference and crosslinguistic interference
title_short The learning of the past progressive tense: an investigation into target language interference and crosslinguistic interference
title_full The learning of the past progressive tense: an investigation into target language interference and crosslinguistic interference
title_fullStr The learning of the past progressive tense: an investigation into target language interference and crosslinguistic interference
title_full_unstemmed The learning of the past progressive tense: an investigation into target language interference and crosslinguistic interference
title_sort learning of the past progressive tense: an investigation into target language interference and crosslinguistic interference
publisher Penerbit Universiti Malaysia Sabah
publishDate 2002
url https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/18692/
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score 13.18916