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Original Articles

The form and functions of newcomer EAL students’ speech in English: patterns of progression and communication in semi-structured interview dialogue

ORCID Icon, , &
Pages 18-34 | Received 30 Aug 2017, Accepted 18 Feb 2018, Published online: 08 Mar 2018
 

ABSTRACT

Analysis of progression in spoken English by newcomer migrant-background learners has traditionally oscillated between formal assessment of oral proficiency and ethnographic description of naturally occurring peer discourse. This paper reports on data gathered from a longitudinal study of newly arrived students with English as an additional language (EAL) in secondary schools in England. The corpus examined consists of semi-structured interviews with 22 students of different L1 backgrounds, each interviewed twice within a 12-month interval. Findings reveal marked improvement in comprehension with greatly reduced reliance on interpreters and clarification requests; limited range in use of verb tense, with heavy reliance on the present tense; areas of improvement in communicative function of speech mainly limited to conjecture, likes and dislikes, and expressions of feeling. Progression in the use of reported speech was limited for the group as a whole but where it was used it shed light on the individual's language development and into their views on their social experiences in their new environment. We argue that there is an urgent need for EAL practitioners and researchers to measure language development along similar lines in order to ground future policy-making in evidential knowledge of patterns of development in oral expression in English.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to the Bell Foundation and Diana Sutton for supporting the research on which this article was based and to the research team (which also included Madeleine Arnot, Michael Evans, Linda Fisher, Karen Forbes, Mei Hu, Yongcan Liu, and Claudia Schneider). We are grateful to the participants in the schools and community who gave their time to help this project. The views expressed here are those solely of the named authors of this article. We also wish to thank the anonymous reviewers of this paper for their useful comments and suggestions.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes

1. We define ‘competence’ as implicit knowledge of the L2 and agree with Ellis and Barkhuizhen that ‘what learners know is best reflected in their comprehension of input and in the language they produce’ (Citation2005, 21).

2. All examples in this paper are taken from the transcripts of the pupil interviews in this study.

Additional information

Funding

The Bell Foundation.

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