Abstract:
The study investigated the role of out-of-class exposure in second language
acquisition as predisposed by socio-cultural, religious and geographical conditions
and how it impacts and manifests in L2 performance at High school level. The
Northern Kenya high schools’ are predominantly Islamic-oriented; prioritize Arabic
over English, leading to challenges in English language exposure. However, Kenyan
language policy in Education is upheld owing to geographical boundaries resulting in
minimal English exposure in various activities. Wajir Girls High school (W.G.H.S)
being a tentative sample amidst many other schools- of significance is Umu Salama
Girls Garissa with similar conditions. The objectives of the study Were: (i) To
establish Objective And Concrete Data On What Determines English language
performance in Wajir Girls High school (ii) To establish the role of prior exposure
(away from the class setting) to L2, on its performance in academic English
examinations at secondary school level. The study was conceived owing to the
anomaly at the research site- that despite Language teachers’ commitment in
classroom L2 teaching and learning, little improvement in performance in academic
examinations had been realized by the time of this research. The study adopted a
cross-sectional research design which sampled/targeted the form three students of
Wajir Girls High school who were ‘strategically’ categorized by the researcher into
three proficiency levels High, Mid and Low then interrogated and evaluated for a
period of two weeks (10th Feb to 24 Feb 2014). A variety of tools were employed,
namely: observation scripts, audio recorders, interview scripts, questionnaires and
reference documents such as registration forms, progress records and reports. The
data both primary and secondary was analyzed using Second Language Acquisition
data analysis strategies such as contrastive analysis; does L1 influence positively or
negatively L2? And Error analysis- sources and types of errors (detailed in the
methodology). Stephen Krashen’s Acquisition-Learning theory and/or L2 Acquisition
conceptual distinctive framework provided the basis for this distinctive study between
Out-of-Class Acquisition and class-room instructed Learning. The data collected
established that L2 is many a time acquired just like L1 and to a very little extend
learnt. Prior exposure outside the classroom is therefore a prerequisite for L2
acquisition which provides linguistic raw materials for classroom instructed learning.
However, this is not always the case as observed in Wajir G.H.S .The study revealed
that out-of-class exposure significantly impacts high school learners' performance,
highlighting the idiosyncratic nature of language acquisition and the need for caution
in embracing English as a dynamic language. The study suggests that language
training institutes should diversify training approaches to prepare teachers for diverse
teaching duties, introduce learners to OCLL activities, and educate stakeholders on
language performance to prevent blaming examination councils and teachers on
baseless, subjective, biased, prejudiced, stereotypical and unfounded grounds.