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Theories of First and Second Language Acquisition

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Title: Theories of First and Second Language Acquisition


1
Theories of First and Second Language Acquisition
  • Education 45310

2
Four General Profiles of Students
  • Balanced bilingual
  • Monolingual/literate in native language
  • Monolingual/preliterate in native language
  • Limited bilingual

3
Balanced Bilingual
  • Maria is a tenth grader who was born in
    Guatemala. She moved to Toronto in second grade.
    Before coming to Canada, she was a good student
    and learned to read and write in Spanish. When
    she began school in Canada, she was placed in a
    bilingual classroom where she received some
    native-language support before transitioning into
    English instruction.

4
Balanced Bilingual
  • Duplicating this experience is the goal of
    English second language teaching
  • Individuals who are balanced bilingual are
    influenced by their environments and personal
    motivation
  • Their language competencies are constantly
    evolving and interacting
  • Their working vocabulary is twice as large as
    monolingual individuals even when they begin
    school. 1000 x 2

5
Monolingual Literate in Native Language
  • Rahul is a recent immigrant in grade seven. He
    has grade-level academic ability in his native
    language but speaks very little English. Because
    he has lived outside Canada for thirteen years,
    certain cultural knowledge presents difficulties
    for him. Rahul is quite shy and does not seek
    help readily. He has excellent social and
    academic language skills in his native language
    and has studied English for a few years, but his
    proficiency is limited.

6
Monolingual Preliterate in Native Language
  • Mais family came from Vietnam. They do not have
    a strong support system in Nova Scotia. Mai is a
    third-grader who mainly speaks Vietnamese. Mai is
    one of two ESL students in a rural school in
    Sheet Harbour. She is a nonreader in English and
    struggles with the simplest words. Her spoken
    English is quite limited when she interacts with
    students and teachers in class. The members of
    her family have not been able to provide literacy
    experiences for her at home in either language

7
Limited Bilingual
  • Björg from Iceland (Hafnarfjörður) Icelandic is
    his first language and Icelandic and English are
    the languages he wants to improve upon and learn.
  • Halló My name is Björg .Im turning 18 this
    october. I realy wood like to talk to some one
    that is learnig icelandic or English so pleas
    contact me.
  • http//www.mylanguageexchange.com/Learn/Icelandic.
    asp

8
(No Transcript)
9
Limited Bilingual
  • Luisa is a friendly 15-year old who sits quietly
    in class as if she understands everything. When
    written assignments are given, she writes down
    the assignment and begins work. Her writing,
    however, is illegible, and her spelling is
    extremely poor. Spanish is her first language,
    although her family speaks a mix of English and
    Spanish at home. Luisa can converse quite well in
    both languages, but for some reason has not made
    academic progress in either language.

10
How Do We Teach Them?
  • Research has shown that students acquire second
    language in stages in a similar fashion to how
    they acquired their first languages
  • (Krashen and Terrell, 1983)

11
The Natural Approach
  • Stephen Krashens theory of five stages has
    influenced the entire field of ESL teaching
  • Students have more receptive ability than
    expressive ability during early stages

12
Stage 1 Preproduction
  • Students are not ready to produce language
  • Teachers communicate with gestures and actions
    (Total Physical Response Asher, 1982) while
    students develop vocabulary

13
Stage 2 Early Production
  • Students speak in one or two words, short
    phrases, and have a working vocabulary of 1000
    words they can answer who, what, where questions
  • Teachers encourage students to build receptive
    vocabulary and to produce vocabulary they already
    understand

14
Stage 3 Speech Emergence
  • Students are ready for increased English language
    development
  • Teachers teach curriculum content using native
    language support as necessary

15
Stage 4 Intermediate Fluency
  • Students have developed improved conversational
    skills and increased academic skills depending on
    their age and level of literacy in a native
    language
  • Teachers still provide native language support in
    language arts because students ability to
    understand and complete academic tasks in English
    may lag behind

16
Stage 5 Advanced Level
  • Students continue to need to have their English
    skills refined to further develop their academic
    skills
  • Teachers need to recognize gaps in academic
    ability and provide students with specific
    learning strategies
  • Iverson

17
Considerations for ESL Teaching
  • The importance of academic background and school
    experience increases exponentially with the age
    of the student
  • Most teachers have a theory of first language
    development that influences their teaching

18
Theory 1 Behaviorist (B.F. Skinner)
  • Language is learned through imitation and habit
    formation learning language is a process that
    involves input, imitation, and habit formation
    through repetition
  • Children imitate the language they hear in the
    language environment and receive positive
    reinforcement

19
Implications for ESL learning
  • Second language learners learn to pronounce the
    sounds and words in English in the same way as
    they learned to utter the sounds of their first
    language through imitation
  • They may have difficulty recognizing and
    producing some of the sounds in English and have
    an accent (th, v, w, l, r)
  • PROBLEM embarrassed to speak

20
Theory 2 Innatist(Noam Chomsky)
  • Children learn language because it is in their
    nature to do so
  • An innate predisposition for language learning
    enables children to discover the patterns or
    conventions of language based on the basis of the
    language in their environment

21
Implications for ESL learning
  • ESL learners listen to the English spoken around
    them and subconsciously seek patterns, test
    validity of the patterns by reproducing them in
    their own speech, and over an extended period,
    modify their patterns in response to feedback
  • PROBLEM overgeneralization, interlanguage
    patterns, fossilization

22
Theory 3 Interactionist(Lev Vygotsky, Krashen)
  • Childrens language development results from the
    interaction between the learner and language
    environment, assisted by innate cognitive
    processes
  • Adults tend to address young children using
    modified input strong contextual support with
    communication as the purpose, scaffolding, zone
    of proximal development (Vygotsky)

23
Implications for ESL teaching
  • ESL learners need interaction with proficient
    speakers of English they need modified or
    comprehensible input to make sense of the
    language (Krashen)
  • Learners need background knowledge in the subject
    area to relate to the context and the language
    level of the lesson must not be too far above the
    learners current level
  • Learners then need to be given opportunities to
    produce meaningful output and receive feedback.

24
Theories of Second Language Acquisition
  • Stephen Krashens 5 main hypotheses
  • Jim Cummins contribution an expert in second
    language acquisition among school-aged students

25
Krashen 1 The Acquisition Learning Hypothesis
  • There is a distinction between second language
    acquired through natural communication and second
    language learned formally
  • Implicit idea students learn best through
    modeling and practice, not overt correction by
    the teacher

26
Krashen 2 Natural Order Hypothesis
  • Individuals learn a second language in a
    predictable order

27
Krashen 3 Monitor Hypothesis
  • Individual learners internalize the rules of the
    second language and use these to monitor their
    own errors before and after language production.

28
Krashen 5 Input Hypothesis
  • Language learners progress from one developmental
    stage to the next, so teachers need to
    know/assess the level of students functioning
    and respond accordingly with a greater or lesser
    degree of curriculum support

29
Krashen 5 Affective Filter
  • A positive affective (stress free) learning
    environment will enhance language learning

30
Jim Cummins Contribution (1986)
  • The linguistic interdependence model
    cognitive-academic skills learned in the native
    language will transfer to the new language
    (English) and that such skills are interdependent
    across languages

31
Communicative Demands
  • Communicative tasks English listening, speaking,
    reading and writing may be easier or more
    difficult for ESL learners depending on the task
    itself

32
Cummins Conclusions
  • Students with limited English skills often
    achieve communicative competence more rapidly
    than academic competence
  • Basic Interpersonal Communication Skills (BICS)
    are achieved within two years of immersion in an
    English language environment
  • Cognitive Academic Language Proficiency (CALP) at
    age appropriate levels requires at least five
    years

33
Bilingual Education
  • Bilingual education can accelerate language
    acquisition and enhance academic achievement
    because it is
  • The foundation for second language learning
  • An important tool for learning
  • An important component of personal and cultural
    identity
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