Should We Use Characteristics of Conversation to Measure Grammatical Complexity in L2 Writing Development?
Northern Arizona University · Khon Kaen University
Abstract
Studies of L2 writing development usually measure T‐units and clausal subordination to assess grammatical complexity, assuming that increased subordination is typical of advanced writing. In this article we challenge this practice by showing that these measures are much more characteristic of conversation than academic writing. The article begins with a critical evaluation of T‐units and clausal subordination as measures of writing development, arguing that they have not proven to be effective discriminators of language proficiency differences. These shortcomings lead to the question of whether these measures actually capture the complexities of professional academic writing, and if not, what alternative…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 174.22
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 69
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Subordination (linguistics)
- Conversation
- Linguistics
- Academic writing
- Noun phrase
- Psychology
- Noun
- Phrase