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Second Language Acquisition Semester 1, 2005

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Title: Second Language Acquisition Semester 1, 2005


1
Second Language Acquisition Semester 1, 2005
  • Week 11
  • Individual differences in SLA

2
Non-linguistic factors in L2 development
  • motivation personality / cognitive
    style factors
  • beliefs extroversion / introversion
  • affective states locus of control
  • anxiety risk-taking
  • field dependence
    / independence
  • age aptitude
  • learner strategies

3
Role of individual differences (ID) in L2
development
  • IDs more important in L2 than L1
  • IDs consist of states and traits
  • states specific learning situation or
    state of mind
  • traits enduring characteristics of a
    person
  • Direct versus indirect cause of L2 development.
    ID models are multivariate in that different
    factors combine to affect learning outcomes.
  • IDs are hard to measure.

4
Age
  • Does it make a difference?
  • What kind of difference does it make?
  • What is the cause of the difference?

5
Critical versus sensitive period for SLA
  • A critical period implies that there is an age,
    after which SLA is not possible.
  • A sensitive period implies that there is an age
    when (second) language acquisition is optimised.

6
A sensitive period for SLA
  • What is the evidence for a sensitive period in
    language acquisition?
  • Three generalizations.
  • 1. Universal age of onset of production, rate of
    acquisition and age of completion of language
    learning (Slobin, 1982).
  • 2. Relatively homogenous across individual
    cognitive abilities.
  • 3. Little effect for environmental variation
    (social class, childrearing patterns).
  • 4. Feral cases like Genie, where I child does
    not receive normal exposure.

7
Does age make a difference?
  • 1. Adults are faster than children at earlier
    stages of morphological and syntactic
    development. (Holding time and exposure constant)
  • 2. Older children acquire faster than younger
    children.
  • 3. Child starters outperform adult starters in
    the long run.
  • 4. Attainment of native-like fluency across all
    domains is only possible if the language is
    started prior to six years of age. Learners
    starting not much later than age 6 can become
    fluent but will have an accent in phonology.
    Learners starting after 15 will have 'accents' in
    all domains.
  • (Long 1990)
  • See also DeKeyser, R. M. (2000). The robustness
    of critical period effects in second language
    acquisition. Studies in Second Language
    Acquisition, 22, 499-532.

8
What kind of difference does age make?
  • Phonology.
  • Evidence for a critical age of 6 for phonology
    has come from a number of studies looking at
    age-of-arrival (AO) (Oyama, 1976, Fathman, 1985).
    Counterevidence from Neufield, 1978.
  • Morphology and syntax.
  • Strong main effect for AO no main effect for
    other variables (Coppieters 1987 Newport
    Johnson, 1989 DeKeyser, 2000).
  • Semantics, Discourse and Pragmatics.
  • Not much research but anecdotal evidence for an
    accent in this areas in adult learners.

9
What is the cause of age differences?
  • Social/Affective factors. The development of
    identity makes adult learners more
    self-conscious. Ego permeability and cultural
    identification make it difficult for adults to
    learn another language.
  • Input. Children receive more and better input
    than adults
  • Cognitive development. The cognitive system
    overrides natural language learning. The
    acquisition of metalinguistic skills occurs at
    around puberty.
  • Neurophysiological Loss due of natural language
    learning ability due to hemispheric
    lateralization, or changes due to mylenation of
    neural pathways. Recent evidence shows late
    acquired language to be localised in different
    part of the brain (Kim et al 1999).

10
What difference does it make?
  • Is the native speaker the appropriate target
    for adult SLA?

11
Social Distance
  • Acculturation model (Schumann, 1978) The learner
    needs to adapt to the target language culture in
    order for successful acquisition to take place.
  • Two kinds of distance
  • Psychological (individual) distance
  • Social (group) distance

12
Beliefs
  • SLA can be affected by the attitudes, values,
    theories and assumptions about learning (
    teaching) which learners build up over time and
    bring with them to the classroom.
  • Richards, J. C. Lockhart, C. (1994) Reflective
    teaching in second language classrooms. Cambridge
    University Press.

13
Motivation
  • Integrative motivation is present in learners who
    identify with the target culture, would like to
    resemble members of the target culture and who
    would like to participate in the target culture.
    It is assumed to be based in the personality of
    the learner.
  • Instrumental orientation refers to those cases
    where the learners are interested in learning the
    language for the possible benefits professional
    advancement, study in the target language,
    business.

14
General findings on the role of motivation
  • Motivation plays an important role in L2
    development.
  • Motivation is separate from aptitude.
  • Integrative motivation is more powerful for
    facilitating L2 development in some situations
    than in others.
  • Both integrative instrumental motivations may
    lead to success, but lack of either causes
    problems.

15
Motivation as a multi-componential construct
  • Motivation
  • effort desire to achieve goal attitudes
  • (Gardner, 1985)

16
The motivation construct
  • Short-term motivation towards the day-to-day
    activities in the classroom and general
    motivations for classroom learning are also
    important.
  • The instrumental-integrative dichotomy is it
    real?
  • Does motivation drive achievement or vice versa?
  • Causal versus resultative effects

17
Affective states Anxiety
  • state anxiety versus trait anxiety
  • state anxiety anxiety related to a specific
    learning situation
  • trait anxiety a predisposition to be anxious
    (unchangeable?)

18
There is a non-linear relationship between
anxiety and performance
  • Facilitating versus debilitating anxiety (Scovel,
    1978 Bailey, 1995).
  • It depends on the amount and context of anxiety

19
Affective states Locus of control
  • Internal External
  • Stable Ability Task difficulty
  • Unstable Effort Luck
  • Individuals who believe success is based
    internally on ability and externally on luck are
    likely to be less motivated.

20
Personality cognitive style factorsExtroversio
n / Introversion
  • Extrovert sociable dislikes solitude takes
    risks impulsive.
  • Two main components are sociability and
    risk-taking.
  • Introvert introspective quiet retiring
    reserved dislikes order.
  • Some evidence that introverts have higher
    academic achievement.
  • Extroversion has been linked to success in L2
    development sociable learners should generate
    more input, maximize contact and emphasize using
    the language.

21
Personality cognitive style factors
Risk-taking
  • Risk-taking has been viewed positively in L2
    learning, e.g., Naiman's GLLs.
  • Ely (1986) Risk-taking predicts classroom
    participation which in turn predicts proficiency.

22
The Good Language Learner
  • What strategies do successful language learners
    use that unsuccessful learners don't use?
  • Taxonomies of learner / learning strategies
  • Wong-Filmore (1976, 1979)
  • Naiman, Fröhlich, Stern Todesco (1978)
  • O'Malley Chamot (1985, 1990)
  • Oxford, R. (1990)

23
Learner strategies
  • A behavioral or mental procedure used by
    learners to develop their interlanguages.
    (Ellis, 1997)
  • Oxford's Strategy Inventory for Language
    Learning (SILL). SILL is designed to help
    students better understand how they learn a new
    language and to help them become better learners.

24
L2 Learning Aptitude
  • A generalized capacity to learn a foreign
    language.
  • gt Separate from intelligence
  • gt Reflects rate, not necessarily capacity.
  • gt Concerned with prediction, not necessarily
    explanation.

25
Measuring Aptitude
  • Modern Language Aptitude Test (MLAT) developed by
    Carroll Sapon (1959)
  • Designed to predict success in foreign language
    learning.
  • Four components of Aptitude.
  • Phonemic coding ability
  • Grammatical sensitivity
  • Inductive language learning ability
  • Rote memory skills

26
Aptitude has received limited attention in SLA
research
  • Other factors more important. Motivation,
    cognitive style, attitude.
  • gt High' correlations leave much variance
    unaccounted for.
  • gt Fixed and innate? Empirical question. People
    attacking the notion assume it is fixed,
    determinist
  • gt Elitist. Focus should be learner styles. But
    could be used to identify particular areas of
    strength and weakness.
  • gt Appears to only be relevant to formal
    learning
  • gt Prediction not explanation.

27
End of individual differences.
  • Week 11 end
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