
Language Culture and Curriculum
Editor and Book Reviews Editor: Eoghan Mac Aogain (St Patrick's College)

|
Volume: 13 Number: 2 Page: 126136
|

|
|
|
|
Modern Standard Arabic vs. Non-Standard Arabic: Where Do Arab Students of EFL Transfer From?
|
Abdulmoneim Mahmoud
|

|
This paper focuses on the learning of English as a foreign language by Arabic-speaking students, who are often misled by the partial similarities between the two languages. The problem is further complicated
by the fact that there are two main varieties of Arabic in each Arab country: modern standard Arabic (MSA) and non-standard Arabic (NSA). So, which variety is it that students transfer from? To answer this
question, 50 third-year secondary-school students were asked to translate into English two versions of a short Arabic text; one MSA and the other NSA including 14 relative clauses. No significant difference
was found between the means of the number of clauses produced in both cases. This finding is supported by an analysis of 35 interlingual errors found in free compositions written by 24 students. However,
further research is needed with larger samples of errors and different non-standard varieties of Arabic. The results of this study indicate that it is important to take both MSA and NSA into account when
making use of Arabic in teaching English as a foreign language.
© Multilingual Matters 2000


Full text PDF
|