A study on inflectional morpheme errors made by arts undergraduates at the South Eastern University of Sri Lanka
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South Eastern University of Sri Lanka
Abstract
This paper investigates the inflectional morpheme errors made by the students in the
Faculty of Arts & Culture (FAC) of the South Eastern University of Sri Lanka. Writing has been a
difficult skill to master for the undergraduates irrespective of their faculties. Since, writing is being
regularly tested as part of the end-semester examinations for English as a Second Language (ESL)
courses, it is important for students to master the skill. It is believed that writing skills can be
improved by identifying and analyzing the more prominent errors the learners make. Forty five first
year students of the FAC were given different writing tasks that included free writing compositions
and grammar-based activities. At the end, the errors in their writings were identified, categorized and
analyzed. Special attention was paid to inflectional errors. The study revealed that the most prominent
errors in free writing were the use of third person singular inflections. The students made considerable
errors in writing past tense form too. The majority of the students added the past tense ‘be’ form along
with the past tense verb. In addition, the students made other errors like noun-verb (past tense ‘be’
form) agreement or missing ‘be’ form completely. The study also revealed that the students’
grammatical knowledge of noun and adjective/adverb inflection was weaker, mainly in using
possessives for irregular plural forms and abstract nouns as well as using comparative and superlative
forms. A post-test follow-up focus group discussion was held with the students to find the reasons for
making such errors. However, they were unable to give a satisfactory explanation. In this study,
attempts were also made to analyze the cause of the errors as intra-lingual and inter-lingual errors. A
study of this nature, it is envisaged, will shed light for future research and help make changes in the
instructional methodology, especially in teaching writing skills.
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6th International Symposium 2016 on “Multidisciplinary Research for Sustainable Development in the Information Era”, pp 953-963.