Defining Language, Learning and Teaching
Defining Language, Learning and Teaching
TEACHING.
facilitation of learning
1. CURRENT ISSUES IN SECOND
LANGUAGE ACQUISITION (SLA)
1.1. WHO?
LEARNERS:
Where do they come from?
What are their native languages?
What are their: levels of education?
socioeconomic levels?
Who are their parents?
What are their intellectual capacities?
What sorts of personalities do they have?
= affect their success in SLA
1.1. WHO?
TEACHERS:
1. Language is systematic.
2. 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 learning both have universal
characteristics.
= difficulty of defining!
3.2. TEACHING
Teaching cannot be defined apart form learning.
Teaching is guiding and facilitating learning,
enabling the learner to learn, setting the
conditions for learning.
The understanding of how the learner learns will
determine the teachers philosophy of education
(teaching style, approach, methods, classroom
techniques).
4. SCHOOLS OF THOUGHT IN SLA
4.1. STRUCTURALISM/BEHAVIOURISM
4.2. RATIONALISM AND COGNITIVE
PSYCHOLOGY
4.3. CONSTRUCTIVISM
4.1. STRUCTURALISM/BEHAVIOURISM
the 1940s and 1950s
structural or descriptive school of LINGUISTICS
Leonard Bloomfield, Edward Sapir, Charles
Hockett, Charles Fries
rigorous application of the scientific principle of
observation
subject of investigation= publicly observable
responses, the study of observable behaviour
4.1. STRUCTURALISM/BEHAVIOURISM
BEHAVIOURISM in psychology
focused on publicly observable responses
responses that can be objectively:
perceived, recorded and measured
the scientific method
4.1. STRUCTURALISM/BEHAVIOURISM
observation of: consciousness, thinking, acquisition of
knowledge- impossible to examine, the study of
observable behaviour
e.g. typical behaviouristic model: rote verbal learning
empirical approaches to studying human behaviour
learning= connections between a stimulus provided by
the environment and a response or reward provided by
the individual or between the response and
reinforcement
structure the environment correctly and learning would
usually follow
4.1. STRUCTURALISM/BEHAVIOURISM
EXPERIMENTS:
Pavlovs dog