E N D
1. Second Language Acquisition Romance Languages 700
Fall 2006
2. Romance Languages 700
Fall 2006
3. The Brain
5. "...makes humans what they are. Within the vast human cortex lies a critical part of the secret of human consciousness, our superb sensory capacities and sensitivities to the external world, our motor skills, our aptitudes for reasoning and imagining and above all our unique language abilities.”
[Thompson, 1985, p22].
"...makes humans what they are. Within the vast human cortex lies a critical part of the secret of human consciousness, our superb sensory capacities and sensitivities to the external world, our motor skills, our aptitudes for reasoning and imagining and above all our unique language abilities.”
[Thompson, 1985, p22].
6. Running through this again from a slightly different angle, the various subsystems of the brain are bundles of nerves gathered into specific functional groupings and chains of interconnections which are beginning to be well understood. These bundles of nerves are the organs of the brain.
Running through this again from a slightly different angle, the various subsystems of the brain are bundles of nerves gathered into specific functional groupings and chains of interconnections which are beginning to be well understood. These bundles of nerves are the organs of the brain.
7. Language development = Continuum Stages
Predictable
Sequential
8. Stage I: The Silent/Receptive or Preproduction Stage 10 hours – 6 months
500 “receptive” words
“silent period”
9. Stage II: The Early Production Stage 6 months…later
1,000 words (receptive/active)
One/two-word phrases
Comprehension of NEW material (questions)
Yes/no
Either/or
Who/what/where/…
10. Stage III: The Speech Emergence Stage 1 year…later
3,000 words
Simple sentences
Grammatical errors that interfere with communication
11. Stage IV: The Intermediate Language Proficiency Stage 1 year… more
6,000 words
Complex statements
Opinions, share thoughts
Ask for clarification
Length.
Students can speak at greater length.
Students can speak at greater length.
12. Stage V: The Advanced Language Proficiency Stage 5-7 years
Specialized content-area vocabulary
Grammar/vocabulary comparable to native speaker Students use grammar and vocabulary to native speaker of similar age and intellectual capacity.Students use grammar and vocabulary to native speaker of similar age and intellectual capacity.
13. "Acquisition requires meaningful interaction in the target language - natural communication - in which speakers are concerned not with the form of their utterances but with the messages they are conveying and understanding." Stephen Krashen
14. Acquisition / Learning Experience interactions with the language
Natural assimilation
Intuition
Subconscious process
Similar to first language Store information about the language
Study with written text
Logical deductive reasoning
Form is of great importance
Syllabus governs teaching/learning interactions
15. Krashen’s theory the Acquisition-Learning hypothesis,
the Monitor hypothesis,
the Natural Order hypothesis,
the Input hypothesis,
and the Affective Filter hypothesis.
16. Monitor hypothesis practical result of learned grammar
acts in a planning, editing and correcting function
Minor role: correct deviations from 'normal' speech and give speech a more 'polished' appearance
17. Use of the monitor individual variation among language learners
Under-users (extroverts)
Over-users (introverts, perfectionists)
Optional users
18. Natural order acquisition of grammatical structures follows a predictable order
order seems to be independent of the learners' age, L1 background, conditions of exposure
19. Input Only concerned with acquisition
Input + 1
Comprehensible Zone of Proximal Development is a notion whose definition we owe to Lev Vygotsky, who believed that intellectual development (of children) was a function of human communities (not individual achievement). ZPD = gap between current level of development and potential (or emerging) level of development. Zone of Proximal Development is a notion whose definition we owe to Lev Vygotsky, who believed that intellectual development (of children) was a function of human communities (not individual achievement). ZPD = gap between current level of development and potential (or emerging) level of development.
20. Affective filter variables play facilitative, non-casual role in acquistion
Motivation
Self-confidence
Anxiety
21. Cognitive Linguistics Efficiency
grammatical structures of language are directly associated with the way people conceptualize Language faculty in the brain is ultimately rooted in the general process of human cognition (no processes are unique to language).
The cognitivists believe that the grammatical structures of language are directly associated with the way people conceptualize (i.e., think about and understand) any given situation in the world. Syntax, morphology, even phonology are conceptual in nature, i.e., they are merely input and output of those cognitive processes within the human mind that govern speaking and understanding. This idea is generally encapsulated in a phrase coined by Ronald Langacker and often repeated by cognitive linguists: grammar is conceptualization.
In other words, language gets learned just like anything else gets learned. The use of language has nothing special about it that differentiates it from other cognitive processes. Rather, the human infant uses the same store of cognitive tools and processes to learn and use language as he learns to do anything else. Cognition is cognition. Learning is learning. Pattern-recognition and matching is pattern-recognition and matching; imitation and practice is imitation and practice, whether learning your native language or learning to ride a bicycle or select and put on clothes to wear. Language faculty in the brain is ultimately rooted in the general process of human cognition (no processes are unique to language).
The cognitivists believe that the grammatical structures of language are directly associated with the way people conceptualize (i.e., think about and understand) any given situation in the world. Syntax, morphology, even phonology are conceptual in nature, i.e., they are merely input and output of those cognitive processes within the human mind that govern speaking and understanding. This idea is generally encapsulated in a phrase coined by Ronald Langacker and often repeated by cognitive linguists: grammar is conceptualization.
In other words, language gets learned just like anything else gets learned. The use of language has nothing special about it that differentiates it from other cognitive processes. Rather, the human infant uses the same store of cognitive tools and processes to learn and use language as he learns to do anything else. Cognition is cognition. Learning is learning. Pattern-recognition and matching is pattern-recognition and matching; imitation and practice is imitation and practice, whether learning your native language or learning to ride a bicycle or select and put on clothes to wear.
22. Cognitive priciple of relevance the human cognitive system is geared to look out for relevant information, which will interact with existing mentally-represented information and bring about positive cognitive effects based on a combination of new and old information.
23. Theory of Multiple Intelligences
24. Grammar Krashen: when target language is used to explain = [I + 1] + filter is low (focus is not on medium, but on what is talked about) = acquisition!
Non-native instructors are best
If primary goal is interaction (acquisition), native instructors have an advantage
25. References Steven Krashen, Second language acquisition and second language learning
http://www.sdkrashen.com/SL_Acquisition_and_Learning/index.html
Cognitive Linguistics: George Lakoff, Leonard Talmy, Gilles Fauconnier, Fillmore
Langacker, Foundations of Cognitive Grammar, 1987, 1991.
Lakoff and Johnson, Metaphors We Live By, 1980.
Lakoff, Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things,1987.
Howard Gardner, Intelligence Reframed: Multiple Intelligences for the 21st. Century, 1999.
http://www.infed.org/thinkers/gardner.htm