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Fitting Grammar into the Language Learning Experience

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Title: Fitting Grammar into the Language Learning Experience


1
Fitting Grammar into the Language Learning
Experience
  • Grant Goodall
  • UCSD

2
The basic problem
  • Given meaningful exposure to language, learners
    implicit grammar will develop.
  • Should we as teachers intervene? Should we do
    more than just provide meaningful input and
    interaction?
  • If so, what should we do?

3
You might think answer is clearly yes
  • After one year of study, most students abilities
    are still poor.
  • Would they be able to survive in the target
    culture?
  • What kind of job could they have?
  • Would anyone want to be their friend?
  • Dont they need all the help they can get?

4
But lets keep things in perspective
  • 1 year 30 weeks _at_ 5 hours/week
  • 150 hours
  • For a young child (the best 2nd-language
    learner), 150 hours 50 days.
  • (Assume 3 hours of contact per day.)
  • A young child will learn a lot in 50 days, but
    s/he will still have a long ways to go.

5
Is it reasonable to expect more of an
18-year-old?
  • We know their language learning abilities are
    significantly diminished compared to a young
    childs.
  • This does not mean that we should just sit back
    and do nothing.
  • This does mean that we should be cautious in
    assuming intervention is needed.

6
What does the research say?
  • Does intervention have an effect?
  • That is, does grammar-focused instruction affect
    students learning of language?
  • Lets divide this into explicit learning and
    implicit learning.

7
Does grammar instruction affect explicit learning?
  • Yes.
  • It would be very surprising (and discouraging!)
    if the answer were no.

8
Does grammar instruction affect implicit learning?
  • Yes and no.
  • Two complications
  • -How do you measure implicit learning?
  • -What exactly do you mean by grammar
    instruction?

9
How do you measure implicit learning?
  • Usual technique learners produce spontaneous
    speech.
  • This makes it hard to test beginners, whose
    ability to produce spontaneous speech is very
    limited.
  • So most studies deal with intermediate learners.

10
What exactly do you mean by grammar instruction?
  • This is crucial.
  • Research suggests that some types of grammar
    instruction have an effect on implicit learning
    and others dont.

11
Grammar instruction that may have an effect on
implicit learning
  • Look for activities that encourage/force students
    to pay attention to
  • The grammatical form
  • AND
  • (2) The meaning

12
Example 1 Text enhancement
  • The mouse ran down the hall and jumped onto Toms
    bed. Tom felt something fuzzy near his ear but
    thought it was the corner of his pillow. He
    reached up to touch it, but by then the mouse was
    already in his hair. The mouse made a nice
    little nest in Toms hair, and neither Tom nor
    the mouse woke up until morning.

13
Example 2 Structured input
  • Which of the following are true?
  • a) Sandwiches are usually eaten by people.
  • b) The computer was invented by George
  • Washington.
  • c) French is spoken in Indonesia.
  • d) The blouse was removed by Justin
  • Timberlake.
  • e) People are often ridden by horses.
  • f) Horses are often ridden by people.

14
Example 3 Information gap
  • Student A
  • The cow was ridden by the __?__ .
  • Student B
  • The bear rode the cow.

15
All of these examples encourage students to pay
attention to
  • The grammatical form
  • AND
  • (2) The meaning

16
Grammar instruction that seems not to have an
effect on implicit learning
  • Activities that involve
  • Sentence manipulation or creation where students
    do not need to pay attention to meaning.

17
Examples
  • Add yesterday to each sentence and make any
    necessary changes to the verb.
  • Paul eats dinner at 730.
  • Mary runs to catch the bus.
  • Alice breaks the record.

18
Examples
  • Create a proper sentence using the following
    elements
  • the/book/write/famous/author

19
Examples
  • Choose the correct form
  • The car was (sell) for 1700.

20
All of these examples
  • Require students to manipulate or create
    sentences.
  • Do not require students to pay attention to
    meaning.

21
Summary so far
  • Some grammar-focused activities seem to help
    implicit learning, others dont.
  • The crucial distinction
  • Those that help all encourage attention to
    grammatical form AND meaning.

22
Should you do sentence manipulation/creation
activities at all?
  • No effect on implicit learning, but presumably do
    have effect on explicit learning.
  • Readily available. Most textbooks have lots.
  • But keep in mind

23
First, do no harm.
  • Sentence manipulation activities do not help
    students implicit learning,
  • But could they actually do harm?
  • I will suggest that some of them probably do.

24
How could a grammatical activity do harm?!?
  • Imagine an activity that encourages students to
    focus on a misleading generalization.
  • Such an activity could encourage the students
    implicit learning to go down the wrong path.
  • Unfortunately, there are many such examples.

25
An example
  • Many textbook exercises focus on areas where the
    target language makes a distinction that the
    native language does not.
  • For instance, many Romance languages have two
    past tenses (with slightly different meanings),
    while English has only one.

26
Spanish preterite vs. imperfect
  • Two ways to say Juan went to Barcelona
  • Preterite Juan fue a Barcelona.
  • Action completed.
  • Imperfect Juan iba a Barcelona.
  • Action not (yet) completed, or action done
    repeatedly.

27
Why this is hard
  • You must choose. There is no neutral past
    tense form.
  • English doesnt make this same distinction.

28
The classic exercise
  • Anoche yo _____ (ir) a un concierto.
  • Last night I went to a concert.
  • Possible answers
  • (a) Anoche yo fui a un concierto.
  • (b) Anoche yo iba a un concierto.
  • The classic right answer (a)

29
What could possibly be wrong with this?
  • Students need to learn to make the
    preterite/imperfect distinction, and this
    exercise addresses exactly that.
  • All languages make difficult distinctions of one
    sort or another, so this type of exercise would
    seem to be needed in all of them.
  • But notice

30
Problem 1 The subject pronoun
  • Spanish verbs agree with the subject
  • fui I went
  • fue he/she went etc.
  • Subject must be included, so that student knows
    how to conjugate verb
  • Anoche yo _____ (ir) a un concierto.

31
The result?
  • Almost every sentence in this exercise has a
    subject pronoun.
  • In real life, Spanish uses overt subject pronouns
    only in specific discourse conditions (emphasis,
    contrast, etc.).
  • This exercise desensitizes learners to the
    presence of a subject pronoun, encouraging them
    to think of this as the default. Possible
    long-term damage to their implicit grammar.

32
Problem 2 How students approach this exercise
  • Students are taught (or quickly figure out) to
    look for
  • Specific point in past ? preterite
  • Time frame in past ? imperfect
  • In our example
  • Anoche yo _____ (ir) a un concierto.
  • Anoche last night is specific point in past, so
    use preterite.

33
What would a real speaker do?
  • When uttering a sentence, real speakers surely
    dont look for a time expression in the sentence
    to decide between preterite and imperfect.
  • Instead, they know what each tense means, and
    they choose the one that best expresses their
    idea.

34
  • By training our students to look for a time
    expression
  • We are training them to use exactly the wrong
    strategy to choose between the predicate and
    imperfect.
  • Again, possible long-term damage to their
    developing implicit grammar.

35
Problem 3 The right answer
  • Students understandably get the idea that there
    is a single right answer.
  • But this is often not true.

36
In our example
  • Preterite
  • (a) Anoche yo fui a un concierto.
  • Imperfect
  • (b) Anoche yo iba a un concierto.
  • (a) is likely, (b) requires more imagination, but
    both are clearly possible.
  • It just depends what you are trying to say.

37
Summary why this exercise could harm students
  1. It desensitizes them to the use of subject
    pronouns.
  2. It trains them to use exactly the wrong strategy
    in choosing between the two forms.
  3. It encourages them to think there is only one
    right answer, when this is not true.

38
Summary Will this exercise help with
  • Input?
  • No
  • Implicit learning?
  • No
  • Explicit learning?
  • Yes, but not very well.

39
Why do we do exercises like this?
  • They are easy to create or find in books.
  • Students feel that they are mastering something.
  • Teachers feel that they are teaching something.
  • Everybody is happy.
  • But its a fools paradise.

40
How do we help students implicit learning of
these distinctions?
  • Any activity that requires them to attend to both
    the form and the meaning
  • For example

41
Some sample activities
  • Matching sentences to pictures, video clips
  • - E.g. The airplane landed
  • Acting out sentences
  • - E.g. John fell
  • Drawing pictures
  • - E.g. Mary was sad because John went to
    Barcelona
  • Text enhancement
  • E.g. Highlighted imperfect forms in story.
  • Structured input
  • - E.g. T/F questions that crucially depend on
    distinction.

42
Conclusion
  • Can grammar-focused activities help learners
    implicit grammatical development?
  • Yes.
  • Do all such activities help?
  • No. In fact, some may cause harm.
  • How do I know which activities will help?
  • Choose those which require attending to both form
    and meaning.
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