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Linguistic correlates to communicative proficiency levels of the CEFR: The case of syntactic complexity in written L2 English, L3 French and L4 Italian

Gyllstad, Henrik LU ; Granfeldt, Jonas LU orcid ; Bernardini, Petra LU and Källkvist, Marie LU orcid (2014) 14. p.1-30
Abstract
This study is a contribution to the empirical underpinning of the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR), and it aims to identify linguistic correlates to the proficiency levels defined by the CEFR. The study was conducted in a Swedish school setting, focusing on English, French and Italian, and examined the relationship between CEFR levels (A1-C2) assigned by experienced raters to learners’ written texts and three measures of syntactic complexity (based on length of t-unit, subclause ratio, and mean length of clause (cf. Norris & Ortega, 2009)). Data were elicited through two written tasks (a short letter and a narrative) completed by pupils of L2 English (N=54) in years four, nine and the final year of... (More)
This study is a contribution to the empirical underpinning of the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR), and it aims to identify linguistic correlates to the proficiency levels defined by the CEFR. The study was conducted in a Swedish school setting, focusing on English, French and Italian, and examined the relationship between CEFR levels (A1-C2) assigned by experienced raters to learners’ written texts and three measures of syntactic complexity (based on length of t-unit, subclause ratio, and mean length of clause (cf. Norris & Ortega, 2009)). Data were elicited through two written tasks (a short letter and a narrative) completed by pupils of L2 English (N=54) in years four, nine and the final year of upper-secondary school, L3 French (N=38) in year nine and the final year of upper-secondary school, and L4 Italian (N=28) in the final year of upper-secondary school and first year of university. The results showed that, globally, there were weak to medium-strong correlations between assigned CEFR levels and the three measures of syntactic complexity in English, French and Italian. Furthermore, it was found that syntactic complexity was homogeneous across the three languages at CEFR level A, whereas syntactic complexity was different across languages at CEFR level B, especially in the data for English and French. Consequences for the empirical validity of the CEFR framework and the nature of the three measures of complexity are discussed. (Less)
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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Common European Framework of Reference for Languages, syntactic complexity, raters, Sweden, Second Language Acquisition, foreign languages, written production, instructed language learning, T-unit
categories
Higher Education
host publication
EUROSLA Yearbook
editor
Roberts, Leah ; Vedder, Inekke and Jan H., Hulstijn
volume
14
pages
1 - 30
publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
ISSN
1568-1491
1569-9749
project
From A1 to C2 - linguistic correlates to the levels of the Common European Framework
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
44da18e7-3308-43d7-b390-c589a931dd12 (old id 4448080)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 10:58:05
date last changed
2023-10-06 02:49:30
@inbook{44da18e7-3308-43d7-b390-c589a931dd12,
  abstract     = {{This study is a contribution to the empirical underpinning of the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR), and it aims to identify linguistic correlates to the proficiency levels defined by the CEFR. The study was conducted in a Swedish school setting, focusing on English, French and Italian, and examined the relationship between CEFR levels (A1-C2) assigned by experienced raters to learners’ written texts and three measures of syntactic complexity (based on length of t-unit, subclause ratio, and mean length of clause (cf. Norris & Ortega, 2009)). Data were elicited through two written tasks (a short letter and a narrative) completed by pupils of L2 English (N=54) in years four, nine and the final year of upper-secondary school, L3 French (N=38) in year nine and the final year of upper-secondary school, and L4 Italian (N=28) in the final year of upper-secondary school and first year of university. The results showed that, globally, there were weak to medium-strong correlations between assigned CEFR levels and the three measures of syntactic complexity in English, French and Italian. Furthermore, it was found that syntactic complexity was homogeneous across the three languages at CEFR level A, whereas syntactic complexity was different across languages at CEFR level B, especially in the data for English and French. Consequences for the empirical validity of the CEFR framework and the nature of the three measures of complexity are discussed.}},
  author       = {{Gyllstad, Henrik and Granfeldt, Jonas and Bernardini, Petra and Källkvist, Marie}},
  booktitle    = {{EUROSLA Yearbook}},
  editor       = {{Roberts, Leah and Vedder, Inekke and Jan H., Hulstijn}},
  issn         = {{1568-1491}},
  keywords     = {{Common European Framework of Reference for Languages; syntactic complexity; raters; Sweden; Second Language Acquisition; foreign languages; written production; instructed language learning; T-unit}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{1--30}},
  publisher    = {{John Benjamins Publishing Company}},
  title        = {{Linguistic correlates to communicative proficiency levels of the CEFR: The case of syntactic complexity in written L2 English, L3 French and L4 Italian}},
  volume       = {{14}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}