The present research, meticulously constructed to scrutinize the studies related to
language transfer in teaching Turkish as a foreign language from various perspectives,
employed a qualitative research methodology. Data were gathered utilizing a document
analysis technique, and the interpretation of the gathered data was conducted employing
a descriptive analytical approach. The studies conducted on the effect of language
transfer on teaching Turkish as a foreign language (TTAFL) were examined in terms of type,
year, learning fields, language level, distribution by country, and how the transfer is
discussed. It was found that 61.8% (f=81) of the scientific studies on the transfer in TTAFL
are articles, 30.5% (f=40) are master’s theses, 6.1% (f=8) are doctoral theses, and 1.5%
(f=2) are academic papers. The first study on this subject was observed to have been
conducted in 1998, the maximum number of studies (f=25) was carried out in 2019, and
there has been a significant increase in interest in the subject since 2007. The maximum
number of studies by nationality (f=29) was carried out on Syrians, followed by Afghani,
Palestinian, Kazakh, Iraqi, and Bosnian students. 95 studies focused on the learning of
writing, 35 on speaking, 18 on reading, 11 on listening, and seven on grammar. Six articles,
two master’s theses and a doctoral thesis, a total of nine studies, in which the language
transfer was presented under different headings, were identified; and there was no
classification in 122 studies.
Primary Language | English |
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Subjects | Language Studies |
Journal Section | Articles |
Authors | |
Publication Date | June 23, 2023 |
Acceptance Date | May 14, 2023 |
Published in Issue | Year 2023 |