Fossilization in South African Black English : an investigation
Abstract
The English of black students at Sebokeng College of Education is
characterized by a number of deviant structures which consistently
crop up in their written and spoken work. The aim of this study
is to determine whether these deviances have fossilized, or whether
they can be regarded as developmental errors.
Literature dealing with interlanguage and fossilization is reviewed
in order to establish a theoretical basis for the empirical
research. Interlanguage studies reveal that interlanguage (IL) can
be regarded as a process or a product. When language errors are
investigated (as in the case of this study), IL is regarded as a
product.
Fossilization as a feature of IL is a very complex phenomenon. One
of the reasons may be that it has to be explained in both
psycholinguistic and sociolinguistic terms. There are many factors
which may give rise to fossilization. Many of the causes of
fossilization mentioned by the various researchers are applicable
to the situation in which black students have learned English. The
views expressed by many researchers that group fossilization (i.e.
when a group shares the same IL with the same distinct features)
may lead to the formation of a new dialect, lead to the study of
literature on new varieties of English (the so-called New
Englishes) .
Researchers claim that there are specific circumstances which lead
to the development of a New English. Most of the criteria for the
development of a New English are applicable to the circumstances
in which blacks learn and use English.
A grammaticality judgment test and posttest were administered to
establish which erroneous structures have fossilized in the IL of
the students . The results of this empirical study were then
compared to features of English varieties found in Africa.
The results of this study seem to indicate that the IL of black
students at Sebokeng College of Education has peculiar features
which were not eradicated by two years of tuition by lecturers who
do not speak the IL the students use. One can therefore assume
that these erroneous structures will remain in the English of these
students, and that this may signify that a distinct dialect is
developing.
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