High-level listening comprehension in advanced English as a second language: Effects of the first language and inhibitory control
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Cambridge University Press
Materia
Listening comprehension L1 background Comprehension monitoring Revisión South Africa
Date
2023-02-27Referencia bibliográfica
Wigdorowitz M, Pérez AI, Tsimpli IM (2023). High-level listening comprehension in advanced English as a second language: Effects of the first language and inhibitory control. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition 1–15. [https://doi.org/10.1017/ S1366728923000135]
Sponsorship
Commonwealth Scholarship Commission and Cambridge Commonwealth, European & International Trust; MSCA-COFUND Athenea 754446Abstract
English is imposed as the language of instruction in multiple linguistically diverse societies
where there is more than one official language. This might have negative educational conse quences for people whose first language (L1) is not English. To investigate this, 47 South
Africans with advanced English proficiency but different L1s (L1-English vs. L1-Zulu) were
evaluated in their listening comprehension ability. Specifically, participants listened to narra tive texts in English which prompted an initial inference followed by a sentence containing an
expected inference or an unexpected but plausible concept, assessing comprehension monitor ing. A final question containing congruent or incongruent information in relation to the text
information followed, assessing the revision process. L1-English participants were more
efficient at monitoring and revising their listening comprehension. Furthermore, individual
differences in inhibitory control were associated with differences in revision. Results show
that participants’ L1 appears to supersede their advanced English proficiency on highly
complex listening comprehension