Grammatical Competence of Grade 11 Learners

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15631/ubmrj.v7i1.124

Keywords:

Grammatical competence, grammar proficiency, areas of grammar, variance of grammar, strands, descriptive, Philippines

Abstract

In the K-12 Curriculum, the Senior High School Curricula tend to neglect purely grammar disciplines as it focuses on English literature. The study intended to identify the grammatical competence of the Grade 11 learners of Ubay National Science High School for the academic year 2018-2019. The study was quantitative research using a purposive random sampling design employing the modified questionnaire based on the English for Linguistics Project (Malicsi, 2017). The tool was pre-tested and underwent item analysis for the reliability and validity of the test questions. The subjects were 139 Grade 11 learners enrolled from the four strands offered by the school. The data were collected, tallied, and treated. Results revealed that morphology was the area where the learners are highly competent, and they are moderately competent in both semantics and syntax. Generally, the grammatical competence among Grade 11 learners is “moderately competent.” There is a significant degree of variance in the three areas of grammar. The variance lies in the area of morphology containing the word inflections and compounding in which learners got most of the high scores.

References

Atta, O., Doe, E.J., Tekpetey, V.N., and Boham, E.H.A. (2014). Assessing Teaching Effectiveness of the English Grammar Teacher in Public Senior High Schools within the Cape Coast Metropolis using the Quality Teaching Model. University of Cape Coast. Retrieved from https://goo.gl/XosCPT (Accessed 10 August 2018).

Barraqiou, D. (2007). Grammar Proficiency of Colegio de San Juan De Letran Calamba College Students. Human Resource Department Letran Calamba. Retrieved from https://goo.gl/ZkvoyE (Accessed 10 August 2018).

Bentsen, L. (2017). “To teach, or not to teach grammar? Teachers’ Approaches to Grammar Teaching in Lower Secondary School Universitetet i Oslo Våren. Retrieved from https://goo.gl/ WXkVFW (Accessed 6 August 2018).

Bloor, T. (2013) “What do Language students know about Grammar?†(British Journal of Language Teaching, 24.3 157-162, 2013) Modern Languages Department, University of Aston. Retrieved from https://goo.gl/cgECqu (Accessed 10 August 2018).

Chomsky, N. (1986). Information Processing Theory New horizons in the Study of Language and Mind. Retrieved from https://goo.gl/88KejG (Accessed 10 August 2018).

Chomsky, Noam (1956). Generative Grammar Theory “Knowledge of Language: Its Origin, Nature and Use. Retrieved from https://goo.gl/jC4ZPy (Accessed 3 August 2018).

Lewis, D., (1970). Theories of Meaning and Value, “General Semantics,†Syntheses 22: 18–67. 1970.

Leyaley, R.V., (2016). The English language proficiency of freshmen students in the Institute of teacher Education, Kalinga Apayao State College. International Journal of Advanced Research in Management and Social Sciences Retrieved from https://goo.gl/ iJ8DZB (Accessed 10 August, 2018).

Malicsi, J. (2017). The English Linguistics Project: English Manual. Anvil Publishing, Inc. Retrieved from https://bit.ly/2m93Ls0, (Accessed last 5 August 2018).

Mill, J.S. (1843). Direct Reference “Theory A System of Logic.†Retrieved from https://goo.gl/jkEdXz (Accessed 10 August 2018).

Petraki, E. and Hill, D., (2010). “Theories of grammar and their Influence on Teaching Practice: Examining language teachers’ Beliefs†Deborah Hill University of Canberra. Retrieved from https://goo.gl/ GKpR7J (Accessed 2 August 2018).

Pienemann, M. (1998). Language Processing and Second Language Development: Processability Theory. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Retrieved from https://goo.gl/4ZnnaV (Accessed 7 August 2018).

UNESCO 2003 “Education in a Multilingual World†Retrieved from https://goo.gl/bv9gCA (Accessed 10 August 2018).

Downloads

Published

2019-09-30

Issue

Section

Articles