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Theories of Second Language Acquisition

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THEORIES OF SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION

Second Language Acquisition

 Behind every teaching approach is


some kind of a theory of
language learning/acquisition
 Second language acquisition
theories are intrinsically related to a
wide variety of disciplines such as
applied linguistics, sociolinguistics,
psychology, neurology, and
education.
 Various theories and models have
been emerged over the years to
study the process of language
acquisition.
Three main schools of thought provide theoretical
paradigms in language acquisition:

Behaviorism (Skinner's Behaviorist Theory)

Innatism (Chomsky's Innatist Theory).

Krashen's Monitor Model/Monitor Theory


Behaviorism (1940s-1950s)

•B.F. Skinner (1904 –1990) was an


American psychologist, behaviorist,
author, inventor, and social
philosopher.
• He considered mind as Tabula Rasa (a blank
slate) that means there is nothing when a
baby is born. Skinner said, "give me a child,
and I will shape him into anything" (T.V.
interview, 1960).
Behaviorism (1940s-1950s)

•Behaviorism is a precursor to cognitive


learning.
•Language:
-is behavior defined as a set of habits.
-can be taught/learned as any other behavior
•Teaching:
-should be done through conditioning.
-consequences determine behavior (e.g. reward or
successful communication).
Behaviorism (Cont)

 According to B.F. Skinner's Behaviorist


Theory, learning is the result of
 Imitation (word-for-word repetition of someone's
else utterances).
 Practice (repetitive manipulation of form).
 Feedback on success(positive reinforcement).
 habit formation.
Audio-Lingual Method as part of
Behaviorist Theory

 It was a method for teaching foreign languages


popular in 1950s and 1960s.
 It is supported by the behaviorist theory of
Skinner.
 It does not use mother tongue to explain vocabulary
or grammar.
 Students drilled in the use of grammar in the target
language.
 English is taught as a second language through
discussion, conversation, and reading.
 Students learned language through a series of drills
involving imitation, repetition and practice (Richards
& Rodgers, 2001)
Behaviorists' Views

Behaviorists view the process of


child' language acquisition in Reinforcement
the following steps:
Controlled Drilling
Memorization
Repetition
•Reinforcement can either be negative
Imitation
or positive.
•Reinforcement will trigger general
stimulus.
Noam Chomsky and Audio-Lingual Method

Chomsky refuted the audio- lingual method that is


based on the behaviorist theory of language learning
for the following reasons:
 It could not function as a model of how humans learn

languages.
 Learning is not imitated behavior.

 Sentences are not learned by imitation and

repetition, but "generated" from the learners'


underlying "competence."
 Language is creative and generative, not a

habit (Richards& Rodgers, 2001).


2.Noam Chomsky's Theory of Innatism (1959)

o Language is an innate capacity. A child's brain


contains special language learning mechanism at
birth.
o Every child has a" language acquisition
devise" (Traxler, 2012).
o Children need only minimum language exposure
to prime the LAD.
o Human brain is ready innately for language in the
sense when children are exposed to speech, certain
principles for discovering and formulating language,
automatically starts to operate.
The LAD Theory

 Chomsky asserted that children were born with the


instinct or "innate facility" for acquiring language.
 The LAD is a postulated organ in the brain
supposed to function as a congenital device for
language acquisition.
 LAD encodes the major principles of a language
and its grammatical structure into the child's brain.
 This theory contradicted B.F. Skinner' theory of
behaviorism and operant conditioning.
Chomsky’s LAD Theory
Stephen Krashen' Theory of Second Language
Acquisition

"Language acquisition does not require


extensive use of conscious grammatical
rules, and does not require tedious
drill."(Stephen Krashen, 1987)

"Acquisition requires meaningful interaction


in the target language - natural
communication - in which speakers are
concerned not with the form of their
utterances but with the messages they are
conveying and understanding." (Stephen
Krashen, 1987)
Krashen's theory of second language acquisition
consists of five main hypotheses:

The Acquisition-Learning hypothesis

The Monitor hypothesis

The Natural Order hypothesis

The Input hypothesis

The Affective Filter


hypothesis
1- Learning Vs. Acquiring

According to Krashen, there are two


independent systems:

•The acquired system is the product of a


subconscious process. It requires
meaningful interaction in the target
language.

•The learned system is the product of formal


instruction and learning. It involves a conscious
process which results in conscious knowledge
about the target language
2-The Monitor Hypothesis

 The monitor hypothesis asserts that a learner's


learned system acts as a monitor to what they
are producing. 
 Three specific conditions needed to use Monitor:
 Sufficient time
 Focus on form
 Know the rule

 When Monitor is not used, errors are natural


3-The Natural Order Hypothesis

• (Krashen, 1987)
4- The Input Hypothesis

 The input hypothesis is only concerned with acquisition,


not learning.
 The L2 learners improve when they receive more and more
L2 'input'.
 "Human acquires language only by understanding messages
or by receiving comprehensible input" (Krashen, 1987).
 Speech will 'emerge' once the acquirer has built up enough
comprehensible input (Krashen, 1987).
 It is also termed as interaction hypothesis which was later
studied as a model by Michael Long
5-The Filter Hypothesis

Affective Filter is a BARRIER that prevents learners from acquiring


language.
A number of attitudinal variables (that act as barrier) affect SLA:

• Low Motivation
• Self Confidence
• Anxiety

According to Krashen (1982), there are ways to lower the affective filter.
A teacher needs to be aware of the student's home life, the home life is
the biggest contributor to the affective filter.
References

 Herrera, S.G.,& Murry, K.G. (2011). Mastering ESL and Bilingual


Methods. (2nd ed.). U.S.A: Pearson Education, Inc.

 Richards, J.C.,& Rodgers, T.S. (2001). Approaches and Methods in


Language Teaching. [Online]. Cambridge Language Teaching
Library. (2nd ed.) Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Retrieved
from: Cambridge Books Online
<http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511667305>

 Krashen, Stephen D. Principles and Practice in Second


Language
Acquisition. Prentice-Hall International, 1987.

 Oxford Seminars. (1992). TESOL/TESL Certification Course: Training


References

 Skinner, B.F. (1957). Verbal Behavior. Acton,


MA: Copley Publishing Group.

 Traxler, M.J. (2011). Introduction to psycholinguistics:


Understanding Language Science. Wiley- Blackwell.
Retrieved from
http://ca.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-
EHEP002301.html

 Wikipedia. (2015). Tabula Rasa . Retrieved from


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tabula_rasa

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