Title: SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION
1SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION
2GENERAL POINTS...
- Second Language Acquisition (SLA) can take place
through different ways
3L2 can be acquired with L1
successively
simultaneously
Age Stage
Environment
L1
childhood
instruction
adolescence
L2
natural
adulthood
4L2 learning or Acquisition !!
- The distinction between L2 learning in an L1
environment or through verbal contact with native
speakers in a natural environment encouraged some
researchers to distinguish between acquisition
and learning.
5L2 Acquisition or Learning !!
Acquisition
Learning
A subconscious process of picking up a language
through exposure
A conscious process of studying the language
6What is SLA?
SLA is a complex process involving many
interrelated determinants the learner, the
environment, the effect of L1, etc.)
7What is SLA?
SLA investigates how people gain proficiency in a
language which is not their mother tongue.
8Historical Perspective
SLA
Improve the way in which an L2 were taught.
1950s-1960s
The focus shifted from the teacher to the learner.
1970 on...
9Questions...
- . How do individuals acquire an L2?
- . Why do learners vary in
acquiring an L2?
10Questions...
- . What are the different thoughts that have been
offered in order to explain the process of SLA?
11SCHOOLS OF SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUSITION (SLA)
- Bhaviourists
- Cognitists or Psychologists
- Creative Constructionists
- Sociologists
12The Behaviourists
13BEHAVIOURISTS
- Language is behaviour acquired according to the
following steps - 1) Imitation
- 2) Repetition (practice)
- 3) Habit formation
14BEHAVIOURISTS
- Imitation Repetition (practice)
- Learners attempt to imitate or copy what they
hear from the L2. - By regular practice (repetition) they establish a
set of acceptable habits in the new language.
15BEHAVIOURISTS
- Habit formation
- The L2 learners try to overcome the L1 habits
(all the structures and elements of the L1) and
learn in their place the habits of the L2.
16BEHAVIOURISTS
- Habit formation
- In this case, the learners compare the elements
of the L1 with those of the L2. Only those
elements of the L2 which differed from L1 are
considered important for learning.
WHY?
17BEHAVIOURISTS
- L2 learners transfer elements or even skills from
their L1 to the L2. - Those elements in the L1 which are different from
the L2 will create problems for the learners. - They will lead him to make errors.
18Transfer
Facilitates learning or has a positive influence
on the command of a skill or part of the L2 due
to similarity between L1 L2.
Positive
Negative
Mango????, Lemon ?????
19Transfer
Impedes learning or has a negative influence on
the command of a skill or part of the L2 due to
differences between L1 L2.
Positive
Negative
This Huda.
20BEHAVIOURISTS
- In order to discover transfer in the language of
the L2 learner, the behaviourists introduced the
term Contrastive Analysis (CA)
21BEHAVIOURISTS
- The goal of CA was to
- identify and catalogue the structural
similarities and differences between languages. - This will help pinpoint areas of similarities and
differences among the languages concerned.
22BEHAVIOURISTS
- Criticism
- 1. Imitation alone cannot explain how the L2 is
acquired. The acquisition task is more complex
than just habit formation.
23BEHAVIOURISTS
- Criticism
- 2. Transfer alone cannot explain all types of
errors. Many of the predicted errors could not
be found. Some of the errors found are unrelated
to the L1
24BEHAVIOURISTS
- L2 learners produced such errors as goed and
taked instead of went and took or they produced
mices or mouses and sheeps instead of mice and
sheep.
25BEHAVIOURISTS
- Criticism
- 3. L2 learners have intuitions that certain
features of their L1 are less likely to be
transferable than others
26BEHAVIOURISTS
- Idiomatic expressions cannot be translated
literally - ???? ?? ???? cannot be translated into you
fall from my eyes
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