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LEARNING TO LANGUAGE LEARNING Wallace,J.(1991) Training Foreign Language Teacher Cambridge University Press By: Dolly Ramos G

Learning to language learning

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Page 1: Learning to language learning

LEARNING TO LANGUAGE LEARNING

Wallace,J.(1991) Training Foreign Language Teachers. Cambridge University Press

By: Dolly Ramos G

Page 2: Learning to language learning

ACQUISITION & LEARNING Acquisition:

It refers to the spontaneous , unconscious and incidental process of internalization that result from natural language use

Learning: to acquire the knowledge

of something through the conscious and formal study

Page 3: Learning to language learning

ACQUISITION & LEARNING

Pick up the lg naturally

Implicit knowledge Formal teaching is

not necessary Using lg for real

communication

Formal teaching is necessay

Knowing about the lg

Knowledge of the rules

ACQUISTION LEARNING

Page 4: Learning to language learning

DIFFERENCES

Innate Exposed all the

time No emotional

barrier Natural motivation No interlanguage

Learned Not used all the

time Might be

emotional barrier Less motivation Reliance on L1

First Language Second Language

Page 5: Learning to language learning

FIRST, SECOND AND FOREIGN LANGUAGE

Concern on children’s learning The main charateristics of Foreign

lg Learning Amount of timeType F or S Responsibility of the teacher

Page 6: Learning to language learning

LEARNING THE FIRST LANGUAGE

READING Age 5 L1 incompletely developed Age 5-6 Literacy skill is on process SPEAKING & WRITING Age 7

Narrative & Extended discourse Reference to characters

Age 11& 15 (not fully developed) Relative Clauses & pronouns

Logical understanding Co-ordinators

language

Page 7: Learning to language learning

LINGUISTIC DOMAINS (P,M,S,L, conversation & discourse) largely independent Child’s early experience(family)

Narative & discourse Vocabulary

Teacher Consider: Childrens’ individual differences and lg

strengths

LEARNING THE FIRST LANGUAGE

Page 8: Learning to language learning

LEARNING A SECOND LANGUAGE Children learn faster than adults. (Hypothesis) Critical Period Hypothesis

Children learning is more effectively before puberty (mechanisim assited the L1)

Lightbown & Spada (1999) Against the Hypothesis Factor needs

Motivation native- profiency SL Context communicative-goal FL

Page 9: Learning to language learning

THE INFLUENCE OF L1 ON L2

Competion Model Bates & Whinney(1989) Explain how L1 learning affects L2 &FL

L1 Reliable or Unreliable

Babies (particular cues) transfer to SL Learning the whole & the parts

7-8 age. Sound and rythm 12-14 age. Word order

Page 10: Learning to language learning

AGE AND LANGUAGE FIRST

Who has less prolonged attention? How would a lesson influence a childs lg

development? Does conversation develop

independently from extended discourse? How can our L1 affect language

learning?

Page 11: Learning to language learning

IS YOUNGER REALLY BETTER

Catherine Snow & Marian Hoefnagel (1978)

X= beginning Y = end TASK CHILD ADOLESCE

NTADULT

PRONUNCIATIONAUDITORY DISC MORPHOLOGY SENTENCE REPET SENTENCE TRANSL SSENTENCE JUST/ VOCAB TESTSTORY COMPREHSTORY TELLING

Page 12: Learning to language learning

IS YOUNGER REALLY BETTER

Catherine Snow & Marian Hoefnagel (1978)TASK CHILD ADOLESCE

NTADULT

PRONUNC Y Y XAUDITORY DISC XYMORPHOLOGY XYSENTENCE REPET XYSENTENCE TRANSL XYSSENTENCE JUST/ XYVOCAB TEST XYSTORY COMPREH Y XSTORY TELLING Y X

Page 13: Learning to language learning

ADVANTAGES TO STARTING YOUNG WITH FOREIGN LG

ADVANTAGES Early starters develop & maintain SOME

areas fo the lg skill Listening comprehension pronunciation Language development

DISAVANTAGES grammar slower Cognitive development

Page 14: Learning to language learning

CONTRASTIVE ANALYSIS

“…is a way of comparing languages in order to determine potential errors for the ultimate purpose of isolating what needs to be learned and what does not need to be learned in a second language learning situation..” Gass & Selinker, p72

Page 15: Learning to language learning

THANK YOU See you next Monday do not forget your

to study and read

Page 16: Learning to language learning

CONTRASTIVE ANALYSIS HYPOTHESIS (CAH)

" The most efficient materials are those that are based upon a scientific description of the language to be learned, carefully compared with a parallel description of the native language of the learner. " Fries (1945)

"...those elements that are similar to his native language will be simple for him, and those elements that are different will be difficult." Lado (1957)

Page 17: Learning to language learning

CONTRASTIVE ANALYSIS ASSUMPTIONS (1)

1- Errors are accounted for by considering differences between L1 and L2

2- The greater the differences, the more errors will occur

3- Focus on dissimilarities in learning; similarities require little new learning

4- Difficulty and ease in predicted by differences and similarities between L1 and L2

Page 18: Learning to language learning

CAH: Two positions

A priori or strong view: comparison between languages will predict learning outcomes

A posterior or weak view: comparison between languages will help explain learning outcomes, especially errors.

Page 19: Learning to language learning

Second Language Acquisition

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TYPES OF ERRORS: INTERLINGUAL & INTRALINGUAL

Interlingual – based on cross-linguistic comparisons

Intralingual – based on language being learned