Title: Introducing SLA of phonology research: a historical perspective
1Introducing SLA of phonology research a
historical perspective
- SLA and contrastive linguistics
2THE PAST FOUNDATIONS
- The 20th century contrastive studies, known under
the name of Contrastive Analysis, originated out
of the need to improve the methods of language
teaching and learning.
3Contrastive Analysis Hypothesis
- strong version (Lado 1957) possibility to
predict all errors as a result of transfer from
L1(NL) to L2(TL) - similar elements were assumed to be easy
- different elements - to be difficult
- weak version (Wardhaugh 1970) comparison of L1
and L2 not enough to predict all errors they can
be explained after the fact
4moderate views
- Gradually, more moderate views replaced the
strong language acquisition hypothesis. - Transfer lost its all-solving status and came to
coexist with the dominant notion interlanguage
(Selinker 1969, 1972), independent of NL and TL.
5Interlanguage Hypothesis
- extreme
- Creative Construction Hypothesis (Dulay and Burt
1974) - the monitor model by Krashen (e.g. 1981) a
distinction between acquisition and learning
- moderate
- Markedness Differential Hypothesis (Eckman 1977,
1981) difficult areas are those that are - different from L1 and
- relatively more marked than L1
6transfer acc. to Gass (1988387)
- The notion of language transfer involves the use
of native language (or other language)
information in the acquisition of a second (or
additional) language. A broader definition of
this sort allows for observed phenomena such as - delayed rule restructuring
- transfer of typological organization
- different paths of acquisition
- avoidance
- overproduction of certain elements
- additional attention paid to the target language
resulting in more rapid learning - differential effects of socially prestigious
forms.
7Weinreich (1953) Languages in Contact
- interference those instances of deviation
from the norms of either language which occur in
the speech of bilinguals as a result of their
familiarity with more than one language - bilingualism the practice of alternately
using two languages - later only native-like use of both languages
(e.g. Bloomfield) vs. any use of an L2 (e.g.
Haugen)
8Lado (1957) Linguistics Across Cultures
- CA - Contrastive Analysis
- transfer individuals tend to transfer the
forms and the meanings, and the distribution of
the forms and meanings of their native language
and culture to the foreign language and culture - differences between the two languages more
important - they cause 'negative transfer
similarities - 'positive transfer'
9behaviourist view of language learning
- Bloomfield (1933), Skinner (1957)
- grammatical structure as system of habits (Lado
1957) - habits acquired through exposure and practice
- stimulus-response
10mentalist view of language learning (Chomsky et
al.)
- Chomsky (1959) review of Skinners (1957)
Verbal Behaviour - the independent grammars assumption - children
have a system of their own, they are not
defective speakers - LAD Language Acquisition Device children
construct linguistic competence by evaluation
measure (hypothesis-testing in acquisition
research)
11independent grammars in L2
- approximative system (Nemser 1971)
- interlanguage (Selinker 1972)
- phonology of interlanguage (Tarone 1978)
- the methodology of Error Analysis (Corder 1971)
- error (of competence) vs. mistake (of
performance) - paradox in Selinker Corder the object of
description is learners knowledge of language
(competence) whereas the research method is the
analysis of his/her performance
12important
- multi-competence should be treated as a norm
its normal for the majority of people to use
another language
13SLA of speech
- Abramson Lisker 1970 cross-lg differences in
the discrimination ability of VOT (responsible
for voicing aspiration contrasts in initial
stops), which agreed with Motor Theory (Liberman
et al 1967) perception accomplished via
production - the categorical perception (CP) paradigm (tests
of discrimination identification of consonants
to discover those lg-specific patterns) - so, the opinion in the 1970s discrimination of
voicing place contrasts in Cs in L2 determined
by the phonemic significance of the stimuli in L1
14SLA of speech cont.
- BUT 2 to 6-month-old infants COULD discriminate
such contrasts independent of their exposure to
the language in which they occurred - THUS loss in discrimination ability (age
progress in L1) - adults Japanese learners of English could produce
/r/ /l/, but not perceive the contrast
production preceded exceeded perception in L2
learning - training to improve perception was unsuccessful -
support for the strong Critical Period Hypothesis
(Lenneberg 1967) from 2 years to puberty - the above conclusions were premature ? detailed
studies demonstrated that
15perceptual difficulty in L2 is relative
- as to voicing, place, context, experience with
L2, but also different acoustic cues used by L2
learners than by natives for the same contrasts
(e.g. for /r-l/ contrast native speakers use F3,
while Japanese learners use temporal differences
and F2) - native lg patterns of phonetic perception are
formed in the first year of life (works by Werker
et al., Polka) - no consistent answer as to children b-n 2 13
whether they have any advantage over adolescents
adults in the perception of non-native
contrasts (Flege et al. vs. Werker others)
16perception vs. production
- perception causal for production e.g. Portuguese
speakers assimilated Fr. /y/ to their /i/
category while English speakers - to their /u/
category - however, prod perc may proceed independently
(in Japanese learners of English perc lagged
behind prod) - "earlier is better" to learn production no
convincing evidence for perc (comment adults
have heard incomparably more signals than
children)
17perceptual training of L2 contrasts
- in the 1980-90s it was demonstrated that
short-term intensive training improves perc
voicing easier than place but longer training
even more - importance of context, e.g. vd/vless ltthgt
contrast trained in CV context improved Fr.
speakers' perc of natural CV stimuli, but there
was NO TRANSFER to VCV or VC contexts "subjects
learn to differentiate position-specific
allophones of phonetic categories, rather than
context-free phoneme categories"
18THE PRESENT
- both children adults have some perc
difficulties they are not due to a loss of
sensory capabilities, but reflect perceptual
attunement - sensitive period gt critical period
- since non-native contrasts are not equally
difficult, contrastive analysis of phoneme
inventories cannot accurately predict perceptual
problems of L2 learners
19THE PRESENT cont.
- selective perceptual patterns are modified in
adults ( children) through immersion or
conversational instruction some perc
difficulties may persist even after production
mastered, so perc prod may be uncorrelated in
more experienced learners - short-term training emphasizing equivalence
classification transfers to novel talkers and
stimuli, but whether it generalizes to all
phonotactic contexts - has not been demonstrated
20Extended References
- Cook, V. 1993. Linguistics and Second Language
Acquisition. London Macmillan. - Dziubalska-Kolaczyk, Katarzyna. 2002. Conscious
competence of performance as a key to teaching
English. In Waniek-Klimczak, E. and Melia, P.J.
(eds.) Accents and Speech in English. Frankfurt
Peter Lang. 97-106. - Dziubalska-Kolaczyk, Katarzyna. 2003. How
learners repair second language phonology and
whether they may become native speakers. In
Waniek-Klimczak, Ewa and Wlodzimierz Sobkowiak
(eds.). Dydaktyka fonetyki jezyka obcego.
Neofilologia, tom V. Plock Zeszyty Naukowe PWSZ
w Plocku. - Dziubalska-Kolaczyk, Katarzyna. 2003. Speech is
in the ear of the listener Some remarks on the
acquisition of second language sounds. In Hales,
Kimberli and Angela Terveen (main editors),
Aurélie Capron, Marion Correnoz and Théo Garneau,
under the direction of Marie-Christine Garneau
(eds.). Selected Papers from the Sixth
College-wide Conference for Students in
Languages, Linguistics and Literature 2002.
Honolulu College of Languages, Linguistics, and
Literature. University of Hawaii at Manoa. 81-92.
21Extended References cont.
- Eckman, Fred R. 1977. Markedness and the
contrstive analysis hypothesis. Language Learning
27. 315-330. - Eckman, Fred R. 1981. On predicting phonological
difficulty in second language acquisition. SSLA
4. 18-30. - Eckman, Fred R. 1991. The structural conformity
hypothesis and the acquisition of consonant
clusters in the interlanguage of ESL learners. .
SSLA 13. 23-41. - Eckman, Fred R. and Gregory K. Iverson. 1993.
Sonority and markedness among onset clusters in
the interlanguage of ESL learners. Second
Language Research 9,3. 234-252. - Fisiak, J. (1993) Contrastive linguistics and
foreign/second language acquisition. In Seeber,
H.U. and W. Göbel (eds.) Anglistentag 1992
Stuttgart. Proceedings. vol.XIV. Max Niemeyer
Verlag. 315-326. - Flege, James Emil. 1995. Second language speech
learning Theory, findings, and problems. In
Strange, W. (ed.). Speech Perception and
Linguistic Experience Theoretical and
Methodological Issues. Timonium, MD York Press. - Flege, James Emil. 1999. The relation between L2
production and perception. ICPhS99, San
Francisco. 1273- 1276. - Jassem, Wiktor. 2003. Polish. JIPA 33, 1.
103-108. - Leather, J. and A.R. James. 1991. The acquisition
of second language speech. SSLA 13. 305-341.
22Extended References cont.
- Major, Roy C. 2001. Foreign Accent The Ontogeny
and Philogeny of Second Language Acquisition.
Mahwah, New Jersey Lawrence Erlbaum. - Proceedings of the 14th 1999 and 15th 2003 ICPhS
(on CDRoms). - Shockey, Linda. 2002. Sound Patterns of Spoken
English. Oxford Blackwell. - Sobkowiak, W. 1996. English Phonetics for Poles.
Poznan Bene Nati. - Strange, Winifred. 1996. Phonetics of
Second-Language Acquisition Past, Present,
Future. 13th ICPhS, 4 76-83. - Strange, Winifred. 1999. Levels of abstraction in
characterizing cross-language phonetic
similarity. ICPhS99, San Francisco. 2513-2519. - Tarone, Elaine E. 1978. The phonology of
interlanguage. In Richards, J. (ed.).
Understanding second and foreigh language
learning. Rowley, MA Newbury House. 15-33. - Wardhaugh, Ronald. 1970. The contrastive analysis
hypothesis. TESOL Quaterly 4. 123-130. - Weinreich, Uriel. 1953. Languages in contact. The
Hague Mouton.