1. language,learning and teaching

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T opic 1 Language, learning and teachingI Language1 The eightfold definition of language:1)Language is systematic and generative2)Language is a set of arbitrary symbols.3)Those symbols are primarily vocal, but may also be visual.4)The symbols have conventionalized meanings to which they refer.5)Language is used for communication.6)Language operates in a speech community or culture.7)Language is essentially human, although possibly not limited to humans.8)Language is acquired by all people in much the same way – language and language learningboth have universal characteristics2 Possible areas of the eight categories:1)Explicit and formal accounts of the system of language on several possible levels (mostcommonly syntactic, semantic, and phonological)2)The symbolic nature of language; the relationship between language and reality; thephilosophy of language; the history of language3)Phonetics; phonology; writing systems; kinesics, proxemics, and other “paralinguistic”features of language4)Semantics; language and cognition; psycholinguistics5)Communication systems; speaker – hearer interaction; semantic processing6)Dialectology; sociolinguistics; language and culture; bilingualism and second languageacquisition7)Human language and nonhuman communication; the physiology of language8)Language universals; first language acquisitionII LearningThe seven domains of research and inquiry:1) Learning is acquisition or “getting.”2)Learning is retention of information or skill.3)Retention implies storage systems, memory, cognitive organizations.4)Learning involves active, conscious focus on and acting upon events outside or insideorganism.5)Learning is relatively permanent but subject to forgetting.6)Learning involves some form of practice, perhaps reinforced practice.7)Learning is a change in behaviour.III T eachingTeaching is guiding and facilitating learning, enabling the learner to learn, setting the conditions for learning. One‟s understanding of how the learner learns will determine one‟s philosophy of education, teaching style, approach, methods, and classroom techniques.A theory of instruction should specify the following features:1)The experiences which most effectively implant in an individual a predisposition towardslearning.2)The ways in which a body of knowledge should be structured so that it can be most readilygrasped by the learner.3)The most effective sequences in which to present the materials to be learned.4)The nature and pacing of rewards and punishment in the process of learning and teaching.Topic 2 First language acquisitionI. Approaches to first language acquisition1.The behaviouristic approach to first language acquisition1)The respondent conditioning theoryStimulus Bell (neutral) Food (natural)Response (conditioned) Salivation (normal)2)The mediation theoryStimulus “Food” FoodOvert response RCovert response Rm food / Sm foodAn illustrationStimuli An igloo is a round dwelling made of ice.Covert response Rm round Rm dwelling Rm ice = the meaning of …igloo‟1)The operant conditioning theoryRespondent behaviour = behaviour that is elic ited by a preceding stimulusOperant behaviour = behaviour in which one operates on the environmentWhat is important is the consequence of behaviour or reinforcer2)Summary: a. the role of environment is emphasizedb. human learning is equated with animal learningc. language is learned in the same way as other knowledge and skills are learnedd. learning is habit formation2.The nativist approach to first language acquisitionLAD or Language Acquisition Device: a built-in device of some kind that predisposes us to language acquisition –to a systematic perception of language around us, resulting in the construction of an internalized system of languageAccording to McNeil, LAD has four innate properties:1)the ability to distinguish speech sounds from other sounds in the environment2)the ability to organize linguistic events into various classes which can later be refined3)knowledge that only certain kind of linguistic system is possible and that others are not4)the ability to engage in constant evaluation of the developing linguistic system so as toconstruct the simplest possible system out of the linguistic data that are encountered Summary:nguage learning is species specificnguage learning is determined by LADnguage learning is internalization of linguistic rulesd. the role of environment is not significant3.The cognitive approach to first language acquisitionTwo types of underlying organization:Functional invariants: the organization which determines the general ways in which human beings interact with their environment and learn from itCognitive structures: the organization which is the product of the interactionFunctional invariants: assimilationaccomodationSummary:a.human behaviour reflects underlying organizationsb.interaction between genetically transmitted abilities and environment is emphasizednguage is learned in much the same way as other knowledge and skills are learned.4. The functional approach to first language acquisitionForm: the abstract phonological and /or grammatical characteristics of languageFunction: the intended meaning or purpose of language useThe distinction between formalism and functionalism:A formalist description of behaviour attempts to discover invariant processes or organismsunderlying the observabl e data: “I want milk” = subject + verb + objectA functional account of behaviour seeks to establish predictive relationships betweenenvironmental or contextual variables and language. The aim of a functional account oflanguage is the prediction and control of verbal behaviour in different contexts and individuals Summary:a.interpersonal interaction is emphasizednguage functions rather linguistic form are emphasizednguage learning is viewed as a sociolization process.II. Issues in first language acquisition1 Competence and performanceIt is not easy to make inference about one‟s competence. This is particularly true for children.2 Comprehension and productionComprehension competence and performanceProduction competence and performanceComprehension precedes production3 Nature or nurtureWhat are those behaviours “nature” provides innately in some sort of predetermined biological timetable, and what are those behaviours that are, by environmental exposure – by “nurture”, by learning – learned and internalized?4 UniversalsLanguage is universally acquired in the same manner, and more over, that the deep structure oflanguage at its deepest level may be common to all languages. There is evidence that the learning of the universal features is not affected by input, but the learning the features found specifically in the target language is affected by input.5 Systematicity and variabilitySystematicity in the learning process: stages and the ability to infer the phonological, structural, lexical and semantic system of language. V ariability in the process of learning: verb tenses in child language, dialectal, stylistic variations in adult speech.6 Language and thoughtThe Sapir-Whorf hypothesis. The interactive view7 imitationSurface-structure imitation and deep-structure imitation8 PracticePractice seems to be a key to language acquisition. Frequency of linguistic input plays an important role.9 InputAdult and peer input is far more important than nativists earlier might have believed. Adult speech seems to shape the child‟s language acquisition10 DiscourseIn order for successful language acquisition to take place, interaction, rather than exposure, is required; Children do not learn language from overhearing the conversation of others or from listening to the radio, and must, instead, acquire it in the context of being spoken to.。