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Article
The impact of a short-term stay abroad on L2 Spanish syntactic complexity development in narratives
Study Abroad Research in Second Language Acquisition and International Education
  • Avizia Y. Long, San Jose State University
  • Megan Solon, Indiana University Bloomington
Publication Date
3-12-2021
Document Type
Article
DOI
10.1075/sar.19002.lon
Abstract

Given the notable increase in participation in short-term (e.g., eight weeks or less) study abroad, especially in the US, recent empirical work on the role of context in second language (L2) learning has sought to investigate the impact of a short-term stay abroad on language development. The present study examined English-speaking learners' syntactic complexity development in oral narratives after a four-week stay abroad. With regard to three measures of syntactic complexity (length of analysis of speech [AS]-units, number of clauses per AS-unit, length of clause), findings revealed that the study abroad group demonstrated no statistically significant change over the study period. However, individual-level analyses revealed that over half of the study abroad learners increased complexity in narratives in terms of clause length. Further, half of the study abroad learners exhibited increases in syntactic complexity on at least two of the three syntactic complexity measures examined.

Keywords
  • Oral narratives,
  • Short-term study abroad,
  • Spanish,
  • Syntactic complexity
Citation Information
Avizia Y. Long and Megan Solon. "The impact of a short-term stay abroad on L2 Spanish syntactic complexity development in narratives" Study Abroad Research in Second Language Acquisition and International Education Vol. 6 Iss. 1 (2021) p. 163 - 188
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/avizia-long/81/