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(Second) Language Acquisition: Student's Name/ ID Vivian 9722609 Betty 9722609 Yuri 9722616 Date Sep. 29th, 2008
(Second) Language Acquisition: Student's Name/ ID Vivian 9722609 Betty 9722609 Yuri 9722616 Date Sep. 29th, 2008
Students Name/ ID Vivian 9722609 Betty 9722609 Yuri 9722616 InstructorPhilip Lin DateSep. 29th, 2008
What are primary differences between a behaviorists, a cognitivists and a Constructivists understanding of language and language learning? Name some scholars and teaching techniques associated with each approach.
Content
Behaviorism
Cognitivistism
Constructivistism Comparative Discussion
Behaviorism
Behaviorism is a study of the behavior of organisms
(including humans) by focusing centrally on publicly observable responses that can be objectively and scientifically perceived, recorded, and measured.
Typical behavioral models were classical and operant
conditioning, rote verbal learning, instrumental learning, discrimination learning, and other empirical approaches to studying human behavior.
A behaviorist might consider effective language behavior to
be the production of correct responses to stimuli. If a particular response is reinforced, it then becomes habitual, or conditioned.
Behaviorism
B.F. Skinners classic, Verbal behavior (1957) Skinners theory of verbal behavior was an extension of his
general theory of learning by operant conditioning. Operant conditioning refers to conditioning in which the human being gives a response, or operant without necessarily observable stimuli; that operant is maintained (learned) by reinforcement. According to Skinner, verbal behavior, like other behavior, is controlled by its consequences. When consequences are rewarding, behavior is maintained and is increased in strength and perhaps frequency.
Behaviorism
The Audiolingual Method It is known as the Army Specialized Training Program (ASTP) or the Army Method. Characteristic of these coursed was a great deal of oral activity-pronunciation and pattern drills and conversation practicewith virtually none of the grammar and translation found in traditional classes.H. Douglas Brown, Teaching by Principle, P.23 The characteristics of the ALM New material is presented in dialogue form. There is dependence on mimicry, memorization of set phrases, and overlearning. Structures patterns are taught using repeating skills. There is little or no grammatical explanation. Vocabulary is strictly limited and learned in context. Great importance is attached to pronunciation. Very little use of the mother tongue.
Behaviorism
The aids of the ALM There is much use of tapes, language labs, and visual aids. The goal of the ALM There is a great effort to get students to produce error-free utterances. The drawback of the ALM 1.Language was not really acquired through a process of habit formation and overlearning. 2.Errors were not necessarily to be avoided at all costs. 3.Structural linguistics did not tell us everything about language that we needed to know.
Cognitivistism
Cognitive psychologies asserted that meaning,
understanding , and knowing were significant data for psychological study and tried to discover psychological principles of organization and function.
Discover underlying motivations and deeper
study typical of behaviorists and employed the tool to derive explanations for human behavior.
Cognitivistism
Chomsky
human language cannot be scrutinized simply in term of observable stimuli and response or the volumes of raw data gathered by field linguists.
Ferdinad de Saussure-
a. Parole (What skinner observes" and what Chomsky called performance) b. language (akin to the concept of competence, or our unobservable language ability)
Cognitivistism
Interest in the ultimate question why
1. What underlying factors- innate, psychological social, or environmental circumstances 2. Why the person did 3. What the persons motivation and psychological state 4. What might have been the cause of the behavior
Constructivistism
Constructivism- A Multidisciplinary Approach
Constructivists think that all human beings construct their own version of reality, and therefore multiple contrasting ways of knowing and describing are equally legitimate. Moreover, they think this theory is based on the idea that the dialectic1 or interactionist2process of development and learning through the child's active construction should be facilitated and promoted by adults. Jean Piaget and Lev Vygotsky, named often associated with constructivism, Piaget stressed the importance of individual cognitive development as a relatively solitary act. Biological timetables and stages of development were basic; social-interaction was claimed only to trigger development at the right moment in time. On the other hand, Vygotsky (1978), described as a social constructivist by some, insisted that social interaction was foundational in cognitive development and rejected the notion of predetermined stages.
Constructivistism
Everything is transient and finite, existing in the medium of time (this idea is not accepted by all dialecticians). Everything is made out of opposing forces/opposing sides (contradictions). Gradual changes lead to turning points, where one force overcomes the other (quantitative change leads to qualitative change). Change moves in spirals not circles. (Sometimes referred to as "negation of the negation")
2 promotes the idea that nothing in society is determined, and that people can break free of a label as individuals
Constructivistism
Constructivism- A Multidisciplinary Approach Researchers studying first and second language acquisition. They figured out that in many ways constructivist perspectives arte a natural successor to cognitive studies of universal grammar, information processing, memory, artificial intelligence, and interlanguage systematicition.
Constructivistism
Constructivism: Cognitive constructivism, social constructivism 1.Nowadays, Jean Piaget and Lev Vygotskys theories are not by any means new to the scene of language studies. Yet, in a variety of poststructuralist theoretical positions, constructivism emerged as a prevailing paradigm only in the last part of the twentieth century, and is now almost orthodoxy. A refreshing characteristic of constructivism is its integration of linguistic, psychological, and sociological paradigms, in contrast to the professional chasms that often divided those disciplines in the previous century.
Constructivistism
Constructivistism
Comparative
School of Thought Typical Themes
Outside performance Repetition/habitual Learning Performance Description Observable performance Scientific method Empiricism/ experience Surface structure Conditioning/reinforcement Analysis/insight Explanation-why Intuition Mentalism Generative linguistics Acquisition/innateness Interlanguage systematicity Universal grammar Competence Deep structure Individual differences Social Practice Context Interactive discourse Sociocultural variables Cooperative group learning Interlangrage variability Interactionist hypotheses
Scholars
B.F Skinner Charles Osgood
Approaches
Audiolingual Method Series Method (Gouin) Direct Method (1930s-1940s)
Structuralism behaviorism
Constructivism
Discussion
First language acquisitionFLA Behaviorist of FLA= Behaviorism of SLA Nativist of FLA= Cognitive of SLA
School of Thought Typical Themes Tabula rasa Stimuli : linguistic responses Conditioning Reinforcement Observable Performance Habitual Innate predispositions (LAD/UG) Systematic/rule-governed acquisition Creative construction Pivot grammar Parallel distributed processing Natural Biologically Cognitive Creativity Rule-governed Scholar B.F Skinner MacCorquodale
Behaviorist
Nativist
Discussion
First language acquisitionFLA Behaviorist of FLA= Behaviorism of SLA Nativist of FLA= Cognitive of SLA
Typical Themes Traits
School of Thought
Language was one manifestation of the cognitive and affective ability to deal with the world and others. The generative rules were proposed under the nativistic framework were abstract, formal, explicit and quite logical with form of language deeper functional levels of meaning.
Discussion
Schools of thought Difference * Focused on publicly observable response-those that can be objectively perceived, recorded, and measured. * The unrealizable of observation of states of consciousness, thinking, concept formation, or the acquisition of knowledge made such topics impossible to exam in a behavioral framework. * The scientific method was rigorously and therefore such concept as consciousness and intuition were regarded as mentalistic, illegitimate domain of inquiry. * Bases on certain learning modals (a) operate condition Skinner (b) instructional learning (c) discrimination learning (d) rote verbal learning More interest in the what question 1.what question about human behavior-objective measurement of behavior in controlled circumstance 2.what happen 3.the physical description Approach Gouin-Series Method -1.use target language 2.No translation 3.No analysis of grammar rules Direct Method (1930s-1940s) -oral communication skills were build up in a carefully trade profession organized around question-and-answer exchanges between teachers and students in small, intensive class. Audiolingual Method 1. ALM was firmly grounded in linguistic and psychological theory. 2. conditioning and habit-formation--drill , pattern practices
Discussion
Schools of thought
Difference
Chomsky human language cannot be scrutinized simply in term of observable stimuli and response or the volumes of raw data gathered by field linguists. Ferdinad de Saussure1.Parole (What skinner observes" and what Chomsky called performance) 2.language (akin to the concept of competence, or our unobservable language ability) Cognitive psychologies asserted that meaning, understanding , and knowing were significant data for psychological study and tried to discover psychological principles of organization and function. Discover underlying motivations and deeper structures of human behavior by using a rational approach. They freed themselves from the strictly empirical study typical of behaviorists and employed the tool to derive explanations for human behavior. Interest in the ultimate question why 1.what underlying factors- innate, psychological social, or environmental circumstances. 2. Why the person did 3.What the persons motivation and psychological state 4.What might have been the cause of the behavior
Approach
Georgi Lozanovs(1979) -Suggestopedia
Discussion
Schools of thought Difference The characteristic is its integration of linguistic psychological and sociological paradigms Emphasis both the learners role in construction meaning out of available linguistic input and the importance of social interaction in creating a new linguistic system. Two branches of constructivism Cognitive & social Cognitive-Piaget a.Learners must individually discover and transform complex information if they are make by their own a. learning is a developmental process that involves change ,self-generation, and construction ,each building on prior learning experiences Social constructivism-Vygotsky a.individuals engaged in social practices....on a collaborative group, or on a global community b.emphasizes the importance of social interaction and cooperative learning in constructing both cognitive and emotional image of reality. e. ZPD (Zone of proximal development) --the distance between learners existing developmental state and their Potential development Approach 1970s-meaningful communication Silent Way Community Language Krashen-Natural Approach 1.The goal is to build the basic communication skills necessary for everyday language situations. 2.the initial task of teachers was to provide comprehensible input ,that is ,spoken language that is understandable to the learner or just a little beyond the learners level
Constructive structure