We examine the effects of age and education on the production of variable grammatical morphology among speakers
of Yucatec Maya. Our investigation focuses on the use of optional plural morphology when describing pictures of one, two and
seven entities performing an action in Yucatec Maya. Our sample (N=69) compares children and adults ranging in age from
5 to 48 years old (mean=19.6, SD=12.1) with levels of education (Spanish-based) ranging from no formal education to some
college. Since the use of plural morphology is not optional in Spanish, this is a particularly interesting test of the effects of
education in Spanish on sentence production in Yucatec Maya. Mixed effects logit models reveal that set size is a significant
predictor of the use of plural morphology and numeral mention. Education, but not age, predicts the use of plural morphology,
though only on nouns. We propose a language-internal and language contact-based explanation.