Research Symposium

22nd annual Undergraduate Research Symposium

Jeffrey Sims he/him Poster Session 6: 2:30 - 3:15/Poster #40


IMG_1061.JPG

BIO


Future attorney and lifelong humanitarian. I am currently a student at Florida State University with dreams of attending law school after graduation. My experience in public interest law firms has brought my attention to cases involving employment discrimination and civil rights violations.

I plan to graduate with a Bachelor's degree in Economics and a minor in Finance. These concentrations have provided invaluable insight into the economic and financial crises that many individuals are suffering through. I hope that, through my hard-work and acquisition of a J.D. ,I will be able to use my knowledge and resources to make a real difference in peoples lives.

Learning a Second Language Unconsciously

Authors: Jeffrey Sims, Shaofeng Li, Ph.D.
Student Major: Economics
Mentor: Shaofeng Li, Ph.D.
Mentor's Department: Department of Modern Language
Mentor's College: College of Language
Co-Presenters: Allie Cordero, Cory Burns, Luis Wong Chen, Gabi Zernik, Carson Long, Jeffrey Sims,

Abstract


The purpose of this study is to assess the bearing of 3 different implicit language aptitude scores [LLAMAD, Artificial Grammar (AG), and Passive Priming (p)] on L2 speech performance. It was hypothesized that all three of these implicit aptitude scores would have significant positive correlations with L2 speech performance. 250 speech samples were recorded by Chinese college student English-L2 learners and rated on comprehensibility and accentedness. The averaged ratings were then compared to the students’ corresponding LLAMAD-, AG- and p-scores resulting from separate tests. It was found that LLAMAD-scores had a significant positive correlation, AG-scores had no significant correlation, and p-scores had a significant negative correlation with L2 speech performance. These results have a bearing on L2 education at large; L2 education traditionally centers on conscious (explicit) language-learning and scholars have called into question the exclusion of unconscious (implicit) language-learning. This data suggests conflicting support for the inclusion of unconscious language-learning streams into L2 curriculum.

Poster.pdf438.88 KB

Keywords: Language, Foreign, Speech, Quantitative, English