SPELLING PERFORMANCE BY SPANISH PRIMARY STUDENTS USING ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE: ANALYSIS OF THE MOST COMMON MISTAKES
Centro Universitario Villanueva (SPAIN)
About this paper:
Conference name: 11th International Conference on Education and New Learning Technologies
Dates: 1-3 July, 2019
Location: Palma, Spain
Abstract:
This article reports upon findings drawn from a research project involving undergraduate student-teachers from Villanueva University Centre and a group of third-year primary school students, undertaken from March to December 2017. Learning to write in English is an emerging skill at this age, one which is influenced by various factors: the child’s reading and writing skills in their mother tongue and their oral competence in the English language. As a result, a strictly phonetic Spanish orthography conflicts with the irregularity and complexity of English spelling.
The aims of the project were to enhance the writing skills in English of third-year primary school students, analyse their most common spelling mistakes, and delve into their origins. With this in mind, a taxonomy of mistakes was elaborated, divided into the five most common errors: letter omission, letter addition, phonetic spelling, L1 interferences and miscellaneous. This taxonomy was applied to 150 children’s writings on a sentence level. The results may have promising pedagogical implications. Two more types of errors were discovered: a changed grapheme order and separate/apart mistakes in compound words. We concluded that an incorrect phonetic spelling was the most frequent cause for these types of errors, followed by L1 interferences. Finally, a list of the most frequently misspelt words was elaborated. Keywords:
Writing, spelling mistake, taxonomy of mistakes, etymology, phonetics, grapheme-phoneme correspondence, L1 interference.