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Theory and methods in the study of the development of case and agreement: a response to Schütze

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2002

MATTHEW RISPOLI
Affiliation:
Northern Illinois University

Abstract

Two recent papers Wexler, Schütze & Rice (1998) and Rispoli (1999a) reach different conclusions concerning the relationship between finiteness marking and pronoun case errors. Wexler et al. claim they are linked, whereas Rispoli finds little evidence for such a linkage. Wexler et al. discounted data from children who made pronoun case errors in 100% of their attempts at a subject pronoun, whereas Rispoli (1999a) included data from such children. This methodological difference may account for our differing conclusions. Schütze (2001) defends the omission of these data, claiming that children who make a pronoun case error 100% of the time do so because the correct pronoun case form is not in the child's productive inventory. Longitudinal data is presented showing the inadequacy of this assumption. Children may err without variation AFTER a period of variation, indicating that these children have knowledge of the correct form. Apparent methodological differences between the two papers reveal deeper theoretical biases. The paradigm building approach taken by Rispoli views longitudinal variation of this sort as a reflection of lexical retrieval principles at work in a developing paradigm. In contrast, the Agr/Tns Omission Model of Wexler et al. finds such variation an uncomfortable inconvenience.

Type
Note
Copyright
© 2002 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

Address for correspondence: Matthew Rispoli, Department of Communicative Disorders, 303 Gilbert Hall, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb Illinois, 60115, USA. e-mail: [email protected]