CH 4
CH 4
Behaviourism
Monitor Model
Cognitive
perspective
Information processing Usage-based learning Competition model Language and the brain
hypothesis Noticing hypothesis Input processing Processability theory The role of practice
Sociocultural perspective
Comprehensible output hypothesis Learning by talking Collaborative dialogue
DID6231
DID6231
Information processing
Language acquisition is the building up of knowledge that can eventually be used automatically for speaking and understanding. New information must be noticed before it can be learned. There is a limit to how much information a learner can pay attention to. Through experience and practice, information that was new becomes easier to process.
Skill learning
New information may first be internalized as declarative knowledgelearner is aware of the information and can report noticing it. Through practice, declarative knowledge is proceduralized, and the learner acquires the ability to use the information appropriately. With further practice, the information can be accessed automatically. So automatically, in fact, that the learner forgets having learned it.
Restructuring
Not all knowledge seems to follow the declarative-procedural-automatic path. Learners may practise something for a while and then appear not to use what they have practised but rather to recognize the relevance of other knowledge.
For example, after saying I saw or I went, a learner may begin to use the regular past ending on these irregular verbs (e.g. I seed or I goed).
Transfer-appropriate processing
When we learn something, we also internalize the conditions under which it was learned and the cognitive processes involved in the learning. Thus, we recall our knowledge of something more easily when the context and processes for recall are similar to those in which we originally learned it.
Usage-based learning
An approach to understanding learning that sees learning as the creation of links (connections) between bits of information Unlike innatists, connectionists do not assume that there is a neurological module specifically designed for SLA. All learning is based on the same processes. Unlike skill theorists, connectionists do not assume that new knowledge must first be declarative.
Input processing Learners have difficulty focusing on form and meaning at the same time.