<b>Working memory, phonemic coding ability and foreign language aptitude: potential for construction of specific language aptitude tests - the case of cantonese</b><br>

Authors

  • Erica Chan Chinese University of Hong Kong
  • Peter Skehan Chinese University of Hong Kong
  • Gwendolyn Gong Chinese University of Hong Kong

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5007/2175-8026.2011n60p045

Abstract

A re-awakening of interest in foreign language aptitude in recent years has also seen some reanalyses of the construct. Prominent in these reanalyses is revised conception of memory and aptitude, and particularly, the role of working memory. A number of studies have explored the relevance of non-word repetition tests as measures of this type of memory. Building on this work, the present article reports on the development of language-specific non-word repetition tests. It is proposed that non-word repetition tests based on the phonological structure of the language to be learned will be particularly effective at predicting second language learning. Non-wordness, in this view, is defined with reference to the target language. The article reports on the development of such tests, focussing on the case of Cantonese, a tonal language, where approaches to the characterisation of non-words are particularly challenging. The article reports on methods of overcoming these difficulties. It also argues that such an analysis of working memory brings this construct close to Carroll’s characterisation of one of the components of foreign language aptitude – phonemic coding ability.

Author Biographies

Erica Chan, Chinese University of Hong Kong

Erica Chan got her MA from the Chinese University, Hong Kong is interested in testing and second language acquisition. In her MA study she investigated the effects of the medium of instruction on second language written performance in an EFL context.

Peter Skehan, Chinese University of Hong Kong

Peter Skehan, PhD is currently a full-time professor in Department of English, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, HKSAR, China. Prof. Skehan had previously worked as a professor at Thames Valley University and King’s College, University of London. His main research interests include individual differences in second language learning, task-based language teaching and learning, and language testing. Prof. Skehan has published widely in the field of applied linguistics and his papers have appeared in such journals as Language Learning, SSLA, Applied Linguistics and Language Teaching etc. He has also published two monographs, including “Individual differences in second language learning” (1989, with Arnold) and “A cognitive approach to language learning” (1998, with Oxford University Press, which won the Kenneth W. Mildenberger Prize) and edited one book (with M. Bygate & M. Swain) “Researching Pedagogic Tasks: Second Language Learning, Teaching and Testing (2002, with Longman).

Gwendolyn Gong, Chinese University of Hong Kong

"Gwendolyn Gong is a professor in the Department of English at The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) and co-editor of the Asian Journal of English Language Teaching (AJELT). She was formerly the Acting Director of the English Language Teaching Unit at CUHK, Director of Freshman English Studies at Texas A&M University in the US, and visiting lecturer at the Institut Teknologi MARA in Malaysia; she also has been a Technical Communication Delegate for People to People International to Russia and the Czech Republic. Her teaching, research, and publication focus on rhetoric and writing, professional editing, literacy, sociolinguistics, gender, and discourse analysis."

Published

2011-10-26