Back to the Basic Variety: does it emerge only with specific learner profiles, environments and languages?

Benazzo, Sandra; Dimroth, Christine; Andorno, Cecilia

Research article (book contribution) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

About thirty years ago, the thorough study of migrants' initial L2 acquisitional stages in the ESF project gave birth to the notion of the Basic Variety, a simple yet autonomous language system, efficient and well suited to many communicative purposes, which learners develop in the context of untutored acquisition in immersion. Our paper discusses this notion in the light of subsequent studies which adopted a similar view on learner varieties and applied it to different populations and learning situations. Our goal is to determine whether and to what extent the core features identified for the Basic Variety need to be adapted when different variables are considered, such as the instructional context, learners' level of literacy, and the specificities of their source and target language.

Details about the publication

PublisherGranget, C.; Repiso, I.; Fon Sing, G.
Book titleLanguage, creoles, varieties. From emergence to transmission
Page range29-70
Publishing companyLanguage Science Press
Place of publicationBerlin
StatusPublished
Release year2023
ISBN978-3-96110-430-7
DOI10.5281/zenodo.10280493
Keywords Basic Variety; L2 acquisition; literacy; instruction; source and target language typology

Authors from the University of Münster

Dimroth, Christine
Professur für Germanistische Sprachwissenschaft (Prof. Dimroth)