LEARNING TO REQUEST IN A SECOND LANGUAGE: A STUDY OF CHILD
INTERLANGUAGE PRAGMATICS. Machiko Achiba. Clevedon, UK:
Multilingual Matters, 2003. Pp. xii + 223. $69.95 cloth.
This volume is one of those workhorses that could easily be
overlooked. However, it represents one of the most detailed and extensive
of the very few longitudinal studies of the pragmatic development of a
child learning English as a second language. The learner, Yao (the
author's daughter), is a native speaker of Japanese. At the age of 7,
with only brief prior exposure to English, she moved with her mother to
Australia, where she was immediately enrolled in a local school. Shortly
after their arrival, Yao's mother began collecting audio and
videotaped data of Yao playing with peers, a teenager, and two adults (a
babysitter and a neighbor). Transcripts of these
interactions—collected every 6 weeks over 17 months by Achiba, who
was present as an observer—form the basis of the analysis. Despite
the fact that Achiba continued to use Japanese with her daughter, Yao
began early on to address her mother in English. Achiba was thus able to
supplement the play data with a diary of additional requests by Yao to her
mother as well as Yao's metalinguistic comments. Yao's requests
were analyzed to determine the development of request
strategies—linguistic realizations and modifications as well as
variation according to goal or addressee.