Abstract:
Language is a tool to convey one’s thoughts, feelings, and needs. Mother tongue is the
language acquired by everyone at birth. A learner encounters mother tongue influence
while learning or speaking a foreign language or target language. Mother tongue
influence is something that affects a person’s thought process in a sense that he thinks
in the mother tongue and expresses it in English or a second language. People use
incorrect pronunciation of words while communicating in English language as they are
influenced by the sound patterns of their mother tongue. A second language learner has
an unconscious preference to convey his customs from his first language to the target
language. The influence of mother tongue has become a significant region and is
generally referred to as language interference. Every language learner comes across this
issue. Students sometimes use words from their parents’ language while
communicating in English. Several factors affect the learning and proficiency of a
second language and among them is the culture, age, environment, method of
acquisition, nature and structure of the first language and the amounts of efforts
invested. This research work investigates the impact of the mother tongue Akan on the
learning and proficiency of the target language. The research was carried out using the
JSS 1 and JSS 2 students of some selected junior high schools in the Offinso
Municipality where Akan is an indigenous language and is mostly used in
communication outside the classroom. Written composition/utterances of the students
were the instrument for data collection. The findings of the data analysis yielded
categories such as vowel harmony/ nasalization, phonemic differences, insertion of
vowels between consonant clusters, wrong placement of stress, wrong use of tenses,
omission/wrong use of rules of concord and wrong use of prepositions. From the results
of the research, it was found out that the mother tongue ‘Akan’ influences the learning
and proficiency of the English language. These findings were discussed and thereafter
conclusion and recommendations were made.
Description:
A dissertation in the Department of Applied Linguistics,
Faculty of Foreign Languages Education, submitted to the
School of Graduate Studies, in partial fulfilment
of the requirements for the award of a degree of
Master of Education
(Teaching English as a Second Language)
in the university of Education, Winneba