Interlanguage and The Natural' Route of REPORT
Interlanguage and The Natural' Route of REPORT
NATURAL ROUTE OF
DEVELOPMENT
INTRODUCTION
The goal of this chapter is to examine the
claims that second language (L2) learners
acquire knowledge of a L2 in a fixed order (in
stark contrast to behaviorist accounts of SLA).
This emphasized the importance of
environmental factors and first language.
Interlanguage was the theoretical construct
which underlay the attempts of SLA researchers
to identify the stages of development through
which L2 learner pass on their way to L2 (or
near-L2) proficiency.
INTERLANGUAGE
The term interlanguage was used by Selinker (1972).
Interlanguage refers to the structured system which the learner
constructs at any given stage in his development and it also refer to
the series of interlocking systems which form what Corder (1971)
called the learners built-in syllabus (i.e. the interlanguage
continuum).
Interlanguage focused on its three principle features, all of which
were raised by Selinker in one way or another. They are listed as
follows:
Language-learner language is permeable
Language-learner language is dynamic
Language-learner language is systematic
ERROR ANALYSIS
The goals of traditional Error Analysis were pedagogic-errors
provided information which could be used to sequence items for
teaching or devise remedial lessons.
The procedure for Error Analysis is spell out in Corder (1974) It is as
follows:
A corpus of language is selected. This involve deciding on the size of
sample, the medium to be sampled, and the homogeneity of the sample
(with regard to the learners age,L1 background, stage of development)
The errors in corpus are identified. Distinguish lapses from errors
The errors are classified. This involves assigning a grammatical
description to each error.
CROSS-SECTIONAL
RESEARCH
The morpheme studies were carried out to investigate the order
of acquisition of a range of grammatical functions in the speech of
L2 learners.
Longitudinal studies
Longitudinal studies have tried to account for the gradual
growth of competence in terms of the strategies used by a learner at
different developmental points.
NEGATION
Some expert had researched about the development of
negatives in using L2 are ( Raven 1968; Milon 1974; Cazden et al.
1975; Wode 1976; and 1980; Adams 1978; Butterworth and Hatch
1978).
At the first time, the learners combine the use of negation by adopting
their L1 form. For example:
No very good
No you playing here
After going through several developments, their known the using
of do+not. For examples:
Mariana not coming today
I no can swim
I dont see nothing mop
Interrogation
Some expert who studied for the description of interrogation
are Raven (1974), Cazden et al. (1975), Gillis and Weber (1976), Wode
(1978), Shapira (1978), Adams (1978), and Butterworth and Hatch (1978).
Relative Causes
Relative causes used to modify the object of a sentence
were acquired first. For examples:
And she said all the bad things that he do.
Joshuas a boy who is silly.
The L2 = L1 Hypothesis
Cazdens (1972) summary of the order of development for
interrogatives in L1 acquisition is strikingly similar to that SLA.
The main stages Cazden identifies:
One word utterances are used as questions.
Intonation questions appear on a regular basis and there are some Whquestions learnt as ready-made chunks.
Intonation questions become more complicated, and productive Wh
questions without inversion occur.
Methodological problems
Error Analysis
The procedure for error analysis was elaborated by Corder (1974) as
Comprising five stages:
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
Morpheme studies
Longitudinal studies
The focus on the grammar
Origins of interlanguage
Neglect of external factors
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