3. Age and Acquisition
1) Types of comparison and contrast
C1 |
A1 |
C2 |
A2 |
L1
L2
① (C1-C2) First and second language acquisition in children, holding age constant
② (C2-A2)
: Second language acquisition in children and adults, holding second language constant
: What type of comparison is the most fruitful in yielding analogies for adult second languqge classroom instruction?
: What will be the central focus in this chapter?
③ (C1-A2)
: First language acquisition in children and second language acquisition on adults
: What type is one of the traditional comparisons, which needs extreme caution (diff btw child & adults)?
2) The Critical Period Hypothesis
Critical Period Hypothesis |
: biologically determined period of life when language can be acquired more : there is such a biological timetable : initially the notion of a critical period was connected only to first language acquisition ↳ Lenneberg(1967), Bickerton (1981): in favor of a critical period before which and after which certain abilities do not develop |
: second language researchers have outlined the possibilities of extrapolating : Bialystok (1997), Singleton & Lengyel (1995), Scovel (1998, 1999) : Classic view - A critical point for second language acquisition occurs around |
3) Neurological Considerations
3-1) Hemispheric Lateralization
: intellectual, logical, and analytic functions appear to be largely located in the left hemisphere, while the right hemisphere controls functions related to emotional and social needs
: enough data have accumulated to challenge the simple view that the left hemisphere is the language hemisphere and the right hemisphere does something else
: a more crucial question for second language researchers on when lateralization takes place, and whether or not that lateralization process affects language acquisition
: Eric Lenneberg (1987) and others-lateralization is a slow process that begins around the age of two and is completed around puberty
* Time of lateralization
- Lenneberg: complete around puberty
- Norman Geschwind(1970): much earlier age
- Stephen Krashen (1973): around age five
: one must be careful to distinguish between ‘emergence’ of lateralization (at birth, but quite evident at five) and ‘completion’ (only evident at about puberty)
3-2) Biological Timetables
: Scovel, ‘sociobiological critical period’ -> toward the development of a socially bonding accent at puberty
: an accent emerging after puberty is the price we pay for our preordained ability to be articulate apes
3-3) Right-Hemispheric Participation
: there is significant right hemisphere participation and that ‘this participation is particularly active during the early stages of learning the second language’
: Genesee (1982), second language learners, particularly adult learners, might benefit from more encouragement of right-brain activity in the classroom context
3-4) Anthropological Evidence
: Sorenson, during adolescence, individuals actively and almost suddenly began to speak two or three other languages to which they had been exposed at some point
: in adulthood (a person) may acquire more language; as he approaches old age, field observation indicates, he will go on to perfect his knowledge of all the languages at his disposal
4. The Significance of Accent
: research on the acquisition of authentic control of phonology of a foreign language supports the notion of a critical period
: it is clear that the chances of any one individual commencing a second language after puberty and achieving a scientifically verifiable authentic native accent are infinitesimal
: upon reviewing the research on age and accent acquisition, as Scovel (1999) did, we are left with powerful evidence of a critical period for accent, but for accent only!
* Arnold Schwarzeneggar Effect, whose accent is clearly noticeable yet who is arguably as linguistically proficient as any native speaker of American English.
5. Cognitive Considerations
:Human cognition develops rapidly throughout the first 16 years of life and less rapidly thereafter.
① Jean Piaget, outlined the course of intellectual development in a child
-sensorimotor stage (birth to 2)
-preoperational stage (ages 2 to 7)
-operational stage (ages 7 to 16)
-concrete operational stage (ages 7 to 11)
-formal operational stage (ages 11 세 16)
* Ausubel (1964), adults learning a second language could profit from certain grammatical explanations and deductive thinking that obviously would be pointless for a child
* lateralization, as the child matures into adulthood, some would maintain, the left hemisphere (which controls the analytical and intellectual functions) becomes more dominant than the right hemisphere (which controls the emotional functions)
② Equilibration
: progressive interior organization of knowledge in stepwise fashion, and is related to the concept of equilibrium
: cognition develops as a process of moving from stages of doubt and uncertainty (disequilibrium) to stages of resolution and certainty (equilibrium) and then back to further doubt
: periods of disequilibrium mark virtually all cognitive development up through age 14 or 15, when formal operations finally are firmly organized and equilibrium is reached
③ rote and meaningful learning
: foreign language classroom should not become the locus of excessive rote activity-rote drills, pattern practice without context, rule recitation, and other activities that are not in the context of meaningful communication
6. Affective Consideration
: empathy, self-esteem, extroversion, inhibition, imitation, anxiety, attitudes
: very young children are highly egocentric
: in preadolescence children develop an acute consciousness of themselves as separate and identifiable entities but ones which, in their still-wavering insecurity, need protecting -> they therefore develop inhibitions about this self-identity, fearing to expose too mush self-doubt
: at puberty these inhibitions are heightened in the trauma of undergoing critical physical, cognitive, and emotional changes
: adolescents must acquire a totally new physical, cognitive, and emotional identity -> their egos are affected not only in how they understand themselves but also in how they use the communicative process to bring on affective equilibrium
* Language ego
: account for the identity a person develops in reference to the language he or she speaks
: language ego may account for the difficulties that adults have in learning a second language
: the child’s ego is dynamic and growing and flexible through the age of puberty -> a new language at this stage does not pose a substantial ‘threat’ of inhibition to the ego
: language ego becomes protective and defensive (the younger, the less protective and defensive : 어릴 때 시작하는 것이 좋다)
: making the leap to a new or second identity can be successful only when one musters the necessary ego strength to overcome inhibitions
: successful adult language learner is someone who can bridge this affective gap
: master adults manifest a number of inhibitions
* Peer pressure
: children, they had better ‘be like the rest of the kids’
: adults tend to tolerate linguistic differences more than children (the younger, the stronger peer pressure) and therefore errors in speech are more easily excused
7. Linguistic Consideration
: Bilingualism
- codeswitching (the act of inserting words, phrases, or even longer stretches of one language into the other) ex. Don't 잔소리
- considerable cognitive benefit of early childhood bilingualism
: Interference btw first and second languages
- transfer (positive / negative (overgeneralization(L1-L1. L2-L2), interference(L1-L2, L2-L1))
- linguistic and cognitive processes of second language learning in young children are in
general similar to first language processes
*age-and-acquisition-inspired teaching method
: total physical response, the natural approach
: "learners would benefit from delaying production until speech "emerge," that learners should be as relaxed as possible in the classroom..."
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