HOW SPELLING IN ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE AFFECTS THE ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE OF FIRST YEAR STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF NAMIBIA
Abstract
The perplexities of spelling in a Second Language against the First (Mother Tongue) has complicated situations in subjects that are taught in English as a Second Language in Namibian schools including the University of Namibia. The complexities on students unfortunately shift to the lecturers as students struggle with /r/ and /l/ in ‘pray and play’ as numerous mother tongues in Namibia have fossilized errors that mix the two. It is observed that first year students at the University of Namibia have numerous spelling mistakes that hamper both teaching learning. This study therefore aims at finding out the causes and effects of such errors on teaching and learning among mixed Second Language and First language students and lecturers who seek to find ways to solve the situation. A qualitative study, designed from phenomenology, through semi-structured interviews, deeply investigated six students and four lecturers teaching English for Academics at the University of Namibia. Amongst many, results show that students face language interference, ignorance, transfer of words from another language to English, false analogy, lack of interest in reading wide among students and exposure (post school activities, parent’s educational background, major language spoken at home) and carelessness. There is need for lecturers to incorporate fun activities in their lectures that cover spelling. Lecturers should also be encouraged to consider various strategies that assist students with spelling.
Downloads
References
Ahmed, I.A. (2017). Different types of Spelling Errors made by Kurdish EFL learners and their potential causes. International Journal of Kurdish Studies. 3(2), 93-110.
Bosiwah & Dadzie, (2015). Spelling errors among Junior High School Students in the Cape Coast Metropolis. Journal of Language, Linguistics and Literature. 1(3), 44-46.
Brisk, M. E., & Harrington, M. M. (2000). Literacy and bilingualism: A handbook for all teachers. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.
Bryant, P., Nunes, T., & Bindman, M. (2000). The relations between children’s linguistic awareness and spelling: The case of the apostrophe. Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 12, 253–276.
Dada, E. M., (2015) Spelling Errors: Causes, Influence on Students’ Performance in English Language Essay Writing and Strategies for Correcting Them. Case Studies Journal ISSN (2305-509X) – Volume 4.
Dadzie, & Bosiwah, L. (2015). Spelling Errors among Junior High School Students in the Cape Coast Metropolis. Journal of Language, Linguistics and Literature. Vol. 1. 46-54.
Fagerberg, I., (2006). English spelling in Swedish secondary schools: Students’ attitudes and Performance [online]. Karlstads University Press.
Figueredo, L. (2006). Using the known to chart the unknown: A review of first-language influence on the development of English-as-a-second-language spelling skill. Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 19(8), 873-905.
Frith, U. (1980). Unexpected spelling problems. In U. Frith (Ed.), Cognitive processes in spelling (pp. 495-515). London: Academic Press.
Frith, U. (1984). Specific Spelling Problems. 10.1007/978-94-009-6929-2_4.
Green, James. (2014). The effect of English proficiency and ethnicity on academic performance and progress. Advances in health sciences education: theory and practice. 20. 10.1007/s10459-014-9523-7.
Nunes, T., Bryant, P., & Bindman, M. (1997). Morphological spelling strategies:Developmental stages and processes. Developmental Psychology, 33(4), 637-649.
Nunes, T., Bryant, P., & Bindman, M. (2006). The effects of learning to spell on children's awareness of morphology. Reading and Writing, 19, 767-787.
Nyamasyo, E. A. (1994). An analysis of the spelling errors in written English of Kenyan pre-university students. Language, Culture and Curriculum [Abstract]. 7(1), 79-92. Retrieved from http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/07908319409525167
Sparks, E. & Deacon, S.H. (2015). Morphological awareness and vocabulary acquisition: A longitudinal examination of their relationship in English-speaking children. Applied Psycholinguistics, 36, 299-321.
Copyright (c) 2019 IJRDO - Journal of Educational Research (ISSN: 2456-2947)
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Author(s) and co-author(s) jointly and severally represent and warrant that the Article is original with the author(s) and does not infringe any copyright or violate any other right of any third parties, and that the Article has not been published elsewhere. Author(s) agree to the terms that the IJRDO Journal will have the full right to remove the published article on any misconduct found in the published article.