Theoriesof Firstand Second Language Session1slideshare
1. Theories of First and Second Language Acquisition MAESTRIA EN DIDACTICA DEL INGLES UNIVERSIDAD SURCOLOMBIANA M.A Omar Andres Atehortua A.
2. Session 1 1 2 4 3 Introductory Concepts Getting to know one another Program Presentation (Objectives – Contents – Evaluation) Discuss how SLA fits into teacher education Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
6. I think pursuing a Masters degree in ELT can help me to..……
7. This seminar is important/not important because …………………
8. I feel………… ……..- I’m looking forward to………………………………………………… Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
9. Which of the metaphors expresses best, in your opinion, the essence of a seminar session?If you can’t find one that suits your ideas, invent your own. In small groups, explain which you have chosen and why.
10. INTRODUCTION Watch the video Educational Quotes Choose 3 or 4 quotes and write them down. Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
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12. You can’t change the tides but you can learn to swimTheories of First and Second language Acquisition
13. Personal Review In pairs, discussthefollowingquestion: RefertoBrown’sbook page 3 Is teaching a craft or a science? Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
14. THE SEARCH FOR LANGUAGE TEACHING PROFESSIONALS Wallace (1991) states that any occupation aspiring to the title of “profession” will claim at least some of these qualities: A basis of scientific Knowledge. A period of rigorous study which is formally assessed. A sense of public service; High standards of professional conduct; An ability to perform some specified demanding and socially useful tasks in a demonstrably competent manner. Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
15. Teachers’ skills Why do you think that teachers (of maths, history, English etc) should have a good knowledge of their subject matter? What kind of knowledge and skills should an English teacher have? How can teachers improve their knowledge? Should teachers pass on all their knowledge to students? Do you think that learning a language means learning grammar rules? Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
16. Subject Matter knowledge B Pedagogical skills A Social Skills C D Enabling skills ? E Teachers’ Knowledge and Skills Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
17. New Generation of Students Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
18. “The information revolution requires a matching education revolution” Institute for Learning and Research Technology Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
19. The craft Model of Professional Education Study with “master” practitioner: Demonstration instruction Practice Professional Competence Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
20. The Applied Science Model Scientific Knowledge Application of scientific Knowledge / refinement by experimentation Results conveyed to trainees Periodic Up-dating (In-service) Practice Professional Competence Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
21. Personal Review Think back to some incident or development that happened in class which you had not planned for, e.g.- A disciplinary problem- an unpredicted error made by a student- an unexpected lack of understanding- A decision on your part that you would have to teach the lesson differently from what was planned, etc.1. What was the problem or development, exactly?2. How did you handle it?3. Why did you handle it the way you did?4. Would you handle it in the same way again? If not, why not?5. Has the incident changed your general view of how to go about the practice of teaching? (e.g, you may have decided in general to be more strict, to use group work less, to ask more questions, etc.) Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
22. The Reflective Model of Professional Education Received Knowledge Practice Reflection Professional Competence Previous Experiential knowledge Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
23. YOU CANNOT EXPECT DIFFERENT RESULTS IF YOU ALWAYS DO THE SAME. Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
24. I hear and I forgetI see and I rememberI do and I Learn AncientChineseProverb& AnEducationalAphorism Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
25. Cone of Learning (Edgar Dale) Nature of Involvement After 2 weekswe tend to remember . . . 5% of what we listen Lectures Reading 10% of what we read Hearing Words 20% of what we hear Passive Looking at Pictures 30% of what we see Watching a Movie Looking at an Exhibit 50% of what we hear and see Watching a Demonstration Seeing it done on Location Participating in a Discussion 70% of what we say Giving a Talk Active 90% of what we say and do Doing the Real Thing Simulating the Real Experience Teaching others – Immediate use of learning Edgar Dale, Audio-Visual Methods in Teaching (3rd Edition). Holt, Rinehard, and Winston (1969).
26. LEARNING WITH A PURPOSE Learning is an active, not passive, process. You can't sit around and expect professors to pour knowledge into you like water into an empty pitcher. To learn, you have to take an active part in learning by preparing for class actively, by working on assignments and projects, by questioning and responding in class, by synthesizing the materials from several classes. This means your professors are going to expect you to be active participants in your learning if you are going to be successful. The responsibility is largely on you! Taken from: Study Guidelines (Harvard) Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
27. Why Study Second Language Acquisition Bi- and multi- lingualism is the norm in the world. SLA research informs theory and practice in L2 teaching and learning. SLA serves as a testing ground for theories of language & cognition Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
28. What does a theory of SLA have to account for? Process: the learner and learning, and the teacher and teaching as Pit Corder once pondered: Does learning take place because of the teacher or despite the teacher? Setting: naturalistic versus formal, second' versus 'foreign' language Individual differences among learners: age, aptitude, motivation, anxiety, etc. L1 influence Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
29. SLA and Related Fields Linguistics Cognitive psychology (psycholinguistics) Language teaching Cross-cultural communication Language planning/language policy Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
30. General issues in language learning research (L1 or L2) To what extent is language 'acquired' or 'learned'? What is being acquired? How do we know when and if it is acquired? How do we explain it? Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
31. Language learning and teaching Brown Claimsthat “secondlanguagelearningis a complex, longtermeffortthatrequiresmuch of thelearner”. In smallgroups of threetofive, share yourownexperiences in learning, orattemptingtolearn a foreignlanguage. Describe yourown a) commitment, b) involvement, c) efforttolearn. Thisdiscussionshould introduce youto a variety of patterns of learning. Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
32. Language Learning and Teaching WholeclassDiscussion Look at twodefinitionsfromlanguage , onefromanencyclopedia and onefrompinker’sbook. Why are thedifferencesbetweenthesetwodefinitions? Whatassumptionsorbiases do theyreflectonthepart of thelexicographer? How do thosedefinitionsrepresentcondensedtheories? A language is a system of arbitrary symbols and the rules used to manipulate them. Language can also refer to the use of such systems as a general phenomenon. Though commonly used as a means of communication among people, human language is only one instance of this phenomenon. Taken from: wikipedia Language is a complex, specialized skill, which develops in the child spontaneously, without conscious effort or formal instruction, is deployed without awareness of its underlying logic, is qualitatively the same in every individual, and is distinct from more general abilities to process information or behave intelligently. Taken from: Pinker (1994) The language instinct Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
33. Language Learning and Teaching Individual work Based on Brown and Ellis’ ideas, write your own definition of language, acquisition, learning and teaching. Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
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35. Byusing a cautious, enlightened, eclecticapproach, you can build a theorybasedonprinciples of secondlanguagelearning and teaching.Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
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37. Richards and Rodgers (1986:5) saidthegrammartranslationmethod “is a methodforwhichthereis no theory”. Whydidtheymakethatstatement? Do youagreewiththem? Share in yourgroupanyexperiencesyouhavehadwithgrammar – translation in yourforeignlanguageclasses. Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
38. Traditional Practice in Grammar input intake developing system output focused practice “...traditional grammar instruction, which is intended to cause a change in the developing system, is akin to putting the cart before the horse when it comes to acquisition; the learner is asked to produce when the developing system has not yet had a chance to build up a representation of the language based on input data.” Source: Lee & VanPatten (1995), p. 95 Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
39. APPLICATION Grammarpresentationtechniques In groups of 2-3 analyzetheoptionsonhowtopresentgrammar (thepresentperfect tense), discusswithotherpairstheadvantages and disadvantages. How do thesetechniquesdifferfromthegrammartranslationmethod? Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
45. Design activities that require both discrete(one answer) andopen-ended(personal opinion) answers.
46. Have learners state the ruleas final phase of the lesson. Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
47. Comparing and contrasting Second Language Acquisition Look at thepictures. Whatdifferencesthatinfluencelanguagelearning can you imagine betweenthetwolanguagelearningsituations? Think of at leastfive Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
48. First Language Acquisition Video: Language and cognition Watchthe video and analyzethefollowingissues: When do babiesstartto “pick up” a Language? When do babies lose orstartto lose soundsthat are not in theirnativelanguage? Towhatextentislanguagedevelopedwhenchildrenturn 5? Whatisthe role of thenaming center in thelanguagepart of thebrain? Accordingto Elizabeth Bates, Howdoeslearningtake place in thebrain? Whatisthe role of cognition in thelearningprocess? Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
49. First Language Acquisition In groups of 3 prepare a short presentation 10 – 15 minutes onthefollowingtopics: Theories of first Language Acquisition 1. Behavioristic approach to language acquisition 2. TheNativistApproach 3. FunctionalApproaches Issues in FirstLanguageAcquisition 4. Competence and performance 5. Comprehension and Production - NatureorNurture 6. Universals – Systematicity and Variability 7. Imitation 8. Practice – Input 9. Discourse Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
50. Key issues and questions for discussion Competence vs Performance Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
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52. Namesomeforms of language and somefunctions of language, didyouexperienceanydifficultywiththelatter?Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
53. Theories about SLA LANGUAGE ACQUISITION DEVICE (LAD child L1) UNIVERSAL GRAMMAR proposes a finite set of fundamental principles that are common to all languages, (a sentence must always have a subject) and a finite set of parameters that determine syntactic variability among languages COMPETENCE vs. PERFORMANCE competence = the mental representation of linguistic rules; intuitive performance = use of grammar comprehension and production Noam Chomsky Aspects of the Theory of Syntax (1965) Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
54. Theories about SLA Hello! Hola! Communicative Competence Canale and Swain (1983) grammatical: mastery of linguistic code sociolinguistic: knowledge of social and cultural rules discourse: ability to connect sentences coherently strategic: ability to use verbal and non-verbal communication strategies Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
55. Theories about SLA SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT THEORY Full cognitive development requires social interaction. The range of skill that can be developed with adult guidance or peer collaboration exceeds what can be attained alone. [child L1 acquisition] Lev Vygotsky 1896-1934 Thought and Language(1962) [discovered in the 1990s] Pedagogical Psychology Institute of Moscow Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
56. Discussion You have heard about several SLA theories: Share your ideas with another participant. List at least 3 FL teaching practices that are linked to these SLA theories. Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
62. Discussion In groups, talk about any cognitive or affective blocks you have experienced in your own attempts to learn a second language. What could you do (or what could you have done) to overcome those barriers?? Do you think it is worthwhile to teach children a second language in the classroom? If so, how might approaches and methods differ between a class of children and a class of adults? Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
63. LEARNING THEORIES Chooseon of thefourlearningtheoriesdiscussedby Brown. Yourtaskisto “defend” your particular theory as themostinsightfulor complete. To do so, eachgroupwillneedtosummarizesthrenghts and toanticipateargumentsfromothergroups. Theresults of thefourgroups’ findings are tobepresentedtotherest of theclass in a “debate” aboutwhichlearningtheory has themosttocontributetounderstandingthe SLA process. Theories of First and Second language Acquisition
71. Technology and Second Language AcquisitionTheories of First and Second language Acquisition
72. Processes involved in learning to communicate PERCEPTION (of units, categories and Functions) COGNITION (Knowledge) ABSTRACTION (Internalizing rules relating categories and functions) Skill Getting ARTICULATION (practicing sequences and sounds) PRODUCTION CONSTRUCTION (Practice in formulating communication) RECEPTION (Comprehension of a Message) Skill Using MOTIVATION (to communicate) INTERACTION (or Real Communication EXPRESSION (Conveying personal meaning)
82. not to pay attention to learners errors so that the learners have an opportunity to develop their confidence and fluency and experiment with the language.
83. Some errors may be more important to correct than others, particularly those ….