Lesson 1. Concepts of Language. Directions in Linguistics. Epistemology of Language Teaching. 1.1. C
Lesson 1. Concepts of Language. Directions in Linguistics. Epistemology of Language Teaching. 1.1. C
DIRECTIONS IN
LINGUISTICS. EPISTEMOLOGY OF LANGUAGE TEACHING.
2
c) Linguistics also looks at the broader context in which language is influenced by
social, cultural, historical and political factors. This includes the study of
evolutionary linguistics, which investigates into questions related to the origins
and growth of languages; historical linguistics, which explores language change;
sociolinguistics, which looks at the relation between linguistic variation and social
structures; psycholinguistics, which explores the representation and function of
language in the mind; neurolinguistics, which looks at language processing in the
brain; language acquisition, on how children or adults acquire language; and
discourse analysis, which involves the structure of texts and conversations.
Although linguistics is the scientific study of language, a number of other
disciplines are relevant to language and intersect with it as, for example, semiotics. In this
subject, we will focus on the three categories of Linguistics as regards the Didactics of
the English Language.
3
1.3.1.2. The process of intake
Intake refers to the ways in which learners process input and assimilate language
to their interlanguage system. Learners will not process all the input available to them.
The concept of intake has given us some insights into why teachers cannot control the
learning process to the extent we might previously have believed.
4
These three introspective methods all depend on learners being able to give clear,
accurate, and honest accounts of what they do. Our awareness as teachers has been
slowly developing in relation to aptitude, learning style and learning strategies, and the
affective factors of personality and motivation.
1.3.2.1. Aptitude
It is quite common to hear people say ‘He has a good ear for languages’, and there
is a body of research evidence to suggest that some people do indeed have an aptitude for
language learning. The problem with the research is that it is not conclusive as to what
abilities constitute aptitude or how these relate to other factors such as intelligence.
Two well-known language aptitude tests, still widely used, are the Modern
Language Aptitude Test (MLAT) (Carroll and Sapon, 1955) and the Pimsleur Language
Aptitude Battery (LAB) (Pimsleur, 1966). These generally put forward a multi-
componential view of aptitude as comprising four components: auditory ability,
grammatical sensitivity, inductive language learning ability, and memory. Each of these
components is tested in order to predict whether a student is likely to be successful in
learning a foreign language.
5
In terms of emotional responses to learning, a variable which has received much
attention is anxiety. Bailey (1995) for example, links anxiety to competitiveness and
argues that if we can discover its various causes we will be in a better position to reduce
it. MacIntyre and Gardner (1991) looked in more detail at anxiety in the classroom. The
greatest anxiety seems to relate to negative experiences in speaking activities. Krashen
(1985) has suggested the notion of the affective filter. This is a representation of the way
in which affective factors such as attitude, anxiety, competitiveness, and other emotional
responses can help or hinder language learning.
6
Bibliography
- Bailey, K.M. (1995). ‘Competitiveness and anxiety in adult second language learning:
looking at and through the diary studies’ in H.D. Brown and S. Gonzo (eds.) Readings on
Second Language Acquisition. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall Regents, pp. 163-
205.
- Carroll, J.B. and Sapon, S.M. (1955). Modern Language Aptitude Test, Form A. New
York: The Psychological Corporation.
- Ellis, R. (1985). Understanding Second Language Acquisition. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
- Faerch, C. and Kasper, G. (1983). ‘Plans and strategies in foreign language
communication’, in C. Faerch and G. Kasper (eds.) Strategies in Interlanguage
Communication. London: Longman, pp. 20-60.
- Gardner, R. and Lambert, W.E. (1972). Attitudes and Motivation in Second Language
Learning. Rowley, Mass.: Newbury House.
- Gardner, R. and Smythe, P.C. (1981). ‘On the development of the Attitude/Motivation
Test Battery’, Canadian Modern Language Review 37, pp. 510-525.
- Krashen, S.D. (1985). The input hypothesis: Issues and Implications. London:
Longman.
- MacIntyre, P.D. and Gardner, R.C. (1991). ‘Language anxiety: its relation to other
anxieties and to processing in native and second language’. Language Learning 41/4, pp.
513-534.
- Pimsleur, P. (1966). The Pimsleur Language Aptitude Battery. New York: Harcout
Brace Jovanovitch.
- Skehan, P. (1989). Individual Differences in Second Language Learning. London:
Edward Arnold.
- Swain, M. (1985). ‘Communicative competence: some roles of comprehensible input
and comprehensible output in its development’, in S. Gass and C. Madden (eds.) Input in
Second Language Acquisition. Rowley, Mass.: Newbury House, pp. 235-253.