Quantitative Reconsideration of an L1 Effect on Asian Learners' L2 English Writing: A Study Based on the ICNALE

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Quantitative Reconsideration of an L1 Effect on Asian Learners' L2 English Writing: A Study Based on the ICNALE
Language: English
Authors: Shin’ichiro Ishikawa
Source: LEARN Journal: Language Education and Acquisition Research Network. 2025 18(1):989-1014.
Availability: Language Institute of Thammasat University. The Prachan Campus, 2 Prachan Road, Bangkok 10200 Thailand. e-mail: learnjournal@gmail.com; Web site: https://www.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/learn
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 26
Publication Date: 2025
Document Type: Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Education Level: Higher Education
Postsecondary Education
Descriptors: Native Language, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Essays, Writing Evaluation, Transfer of Training, Computational Linguistics, Asians, Writing (Composition), Vocabulary, Scores, Language Usage, Foreign Countries, College Students, Language Proficiency, Chinese, Sino Tibetan Languages, Indonesian, Indo European Languages, Korean, Malayo Polynesian Languages, Austro Asiatic Languages, Vietnamese, Thai, Urdu, Tagalog, Language Classification, Language Tests, Word Frequency, Rating Scales, Guidelines
Geographic Terms: Asia, Europe
Assessment and Survey Identifiers: Test of English for International Communication, Test of English as a Foreign Language, International English Language Testing System
ISSN: 2630-0672
2672-9431
Abstract: A writer's L1 is generally believed to influence their L2 English writing significantly. However, the extent to which L1 backgrounds influence Asian learners' L2 English writing has not been wholly elucidated due to the lack of data covering various learners in Asia. Therefore, this study analysed more than one-million-word essays written by 2,318 Asian students with 18 regional backgrounds and more than 14 L1 backgrounds, which were taken from the International Corpus Network of Asian Learners of English (ICNALE) Written Essays and the ICNALE Written Essays Plus, currently under construction. The analytical focus was whether learners with the same or similar L1 backgrounds were agglomerated in a single subcluster despite the difference in the other parameters, such as essay topics. Hierarchical agglomerative cluster analyses that focused on the surface layer (words), the deeper layer (lexicogrammatical features), and the latent layer (textual factor scores) of student writing revealed that the degree of L1-based output similarities may be much lower than generally believed, which requires us to reconsider the traditional view that a writer's L1 is an absolute factor in determining the aspects of their L2 use and establish a new analytical framework for discussion of Asian learners' L2 English.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2025
Accession Number: EJ1470986
Database: ERIC
Description
Abstract:A writer's L1 is generally believed to influence their L2 English writing significantly. However, the extent to which L1 backgrounds influence Asian learners' L2 English writing has not been wholly elucidated due to the lack of data covering various learners in Asia. Therefore, this study analysed more than one-million-word essays written by 2,318 Asian students with 18 regional backgrounds and more than 14 L1 backgrounds, which were taken from the International Corpus Network of Asian Learners of English (ICNALE) Written Essays and the ICNALE Written Essays Plus, currently under construction. The analytical focus was whether learners with the same or similar L1 backgrounds were agglomerated in a single subcluster despite the difference in the other parameters, such as essay topics. Hierarchical agglomerative cluster analyses that focused on the surface layer (words), the deeper layer (lexicogrammatical features), and the latent layer (textual factor scores) of student writing revealed that the degree of L1-based output similarities may be much lower than generally believed, which requires us to reconsider the traditional view that a writer's L1 is an absolute factor in determining the aspects of their L2 use and establish a new analytical framework for discussion of Asian learners' L2 English.
ISSN:2630-0672
2672-9431